The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

‘IMPOSTOR SYNDROME’ FOR NO 1 O’SULLIVAN

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World champion Ronnie O’sullivan eased into the last 16 of the UK Snooker Championsh­ip with a 6-2 win over Matthew Stevens but then admitted to feeling “impostor syndrome” and not wanting to play snooker right now.

The 46-year-old looked in good form at York Barbican and hit two century breaks to take a step towards claiming a record eighth title.

While O’sullivan clinched a recordequa­lling seventh world crown in May and backed it up with victory at the Hong Kong Masters in front of 9,000 fans last month, he revealed his flatness after a routine roundone success yesterday.

“I feel flat, I’ll be honest with you,” he told BBC2.

“I don’t really want to play snooker at the moment, I don’t play much snooker. I just listen to my body, listen to my mind and just go out there and treat it like a practice.

“One thing I am doing is applying myself mentally. Whether I play good or bad, I don’t really care and I will always apply myself well while I am out there, but I don’t feel buzzed up at the moment. I suppose that is normal.”

The world number one rejected suggestion­s in the summer he was the greatest in the sport’s history after his Crucible triumph.

And he again raised questions about how long he will continue to play snooker following this win over Stevens, who after taking the fifth frame to reduce the deficit to 3-2 had no answer to the Rocket.

O’sullivan added: “I shouldn’t even be playing at my age really, by rights.

“Look at (Stephen) Hendry, (Steve) Davis and those guys, so

I don’t take it too seriously and just find it quite funny I am still here. I feel like I have a bit of imposter syndrome.

“It feels like there has been a plot maybe to allow me to do it, so you feel like a bit of a fake.

“I feel a bit not good about it, so that is why when I won the Worlds I was saying it wasn’t really a great thing for me because it put me in that place again of questionin­g myself and the game. I don’t get excited like I used to. I am here to do a job.”

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