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May 2, 2017

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Home » Sports » Snooker

Hearn hits out at critics of 147-break prize kitty

SNOOKER supremo Barry Hearn has said there’s no going back to the days of huge pay-outs for 147 breaks, insisting those complaining about the current prize money on offer for maximums should “get out of the sport”.

There had been no 147s heading into yesterday’s second day of the World Championship final between Mark Selby and John Higgins at Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre in northern England, with a relatively modest 5,000 pounds (US$6,465) on offer to a player achieving the feat during the tournament.

No player has made a Crucible maximum since snooker great Stephen Hendry’s 147 in 2012 and there have only been 10 in the history of the tournament, with Hendry and Ronnie O’Sullivan compiling three apiece.

In 1997, O’Sullivan, nicknamed ‘the Rocket’ for his speed around the table, took just five minutes and 20 seconds to compile one of the most astounding maximums in snooker history.

For that the five-time world champion received a cheque for 147,000 pounds plus the tournament high-break prize of 18,000 pounds.

But despite the greatly reduced prize money on offer, World Snooker chairman Hearn had nothing but scorn for a player who deliberately opted out of the chance to complete a 147.

O’Sullivan made a 146 break in his quarterfinal loss to China’s Ding Junhui, but denied afterwards he took the pink rather than the black after the last red as a protest against the maximum break prize.

“I think Ronnie ran out of position on his,” said Hearn, who added the reduced check on offer for a 147 reflected their increased frequency in a modern game where the overall standard has increased sharply since the days when he was making his name as the manager of six-time world champion Steve Davis in the 1980s.

“Ronnie got a 147 previously and I think he got 147,000 pounds plus the high-break prize. We’ve had lots of 147s this year,” Hearn added. “The fact is that a 147, whether we like it or not, and we can be romantic about it, isn’t as significant as it was in the old days because we have so many of them.

“But if a professional player who is there not just to win games but to play to the best of his ability for whatever reason either turns down or doesn’t try for one, then I am disgusted with their lack of professionalism.

“If this game is only about money, if it’s just about a few bob, in a world where the prize money has changed from 3.5 million pounds to 12 million pounds, and greedy people still can moan, frankly they should get out of the sport.”




 

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