


Trump up to this point hasnt done that yet. O'Sullivan potted pink instead of … Ronnie O'Sullivan - Best Ever? 2. After a patchy start to the campaign, Robertson’s game clicked in November at the ManBetX Champion of Champions when he beat Murphy and O’Sullivan on his way to the final, then beat Judd Trump 10-9 in the best match of the season. A look at the total number of 147 breaks ever scored in snooker history, who made them and videos of the best ones. Ronnie O'Sullivan scored his second Crucible 147 against Mark Williams Stephen Hendry v Jimmy White, 1995 World Championship semi-finals Stephen … Ronnie O'Sullivan v Mick Price, 1997 World Championship first round April 21st: The day Ronnie O'Sullivan scored his 147 in 5:08 minutes at an average of around 8.5 seconds per shot. Ronnie O'Sullivan reaches the UK Championship second round and Stuart Bingham also goes through, making a maximum 147 break along the way. Ronnie O'Sullivan scored his fastest ever 147 break on April 21 at the 1997 World Championship and you can watch it here. Watch Shaun Murphy's genius 147 … Ronnie O'Sullivan's Fastest Ever 147 Break Shows How Much Of A Genius He Is. He has a psychiatrist, Dr Steve Peters, in his team, and credits him with his recent return to mental equilibrium.Ronnie O'Sullivan sinks a quite outrageous double in the World Championship final against Kyren. But after addiction troubles, the fuel he uses is now tea.ģ. He made his first century break when he was just 10.Ģ. And, with Ronnie O'Sullivan's help, its roisterous future. Without wishing to sound callous or frivolous, isn't this the kind of baggage that we think our snooker players should carry? Maybe they have these kinds of lives and backgrounds so that we don't have to. He's even that most Essex cool of things, a dabbler in Buddhism. He met the mother of two of his children at Narcotics Anonymous. He has not one but two native Chinese speakers working on his Sina Weibo (Chinese microblogging) account.

His parents owned a “string” of sex shops. Ronnie O'Sullivan is – or, at least, he should be – the personification of snooker.

I'm not buying it for that.'” In his moment of refusal, he rescued snooker's maximum from its slough of mediocrity. With logic worthy of, say, Jacques Derrida or even Homer Simpson, he explained: “It's like going into a Mercedes garage and when they say that you can have the car for £3,000, you reply: 'No way, that's too cheap. Told it was £10,000, he realised that he was not just dealing in a debased currency but reinforcing that debasement. When his break reached 80, he checked what a 147 would earn him.
