ENGLAND’S Mark Selby and Stuart Bingham will be the World Cup ‘Dream Team’ there to be shot at by the rest for the revived international tournament in June.
Read MoreWORLD'S TOP TWO SELBY AND BINGHAM TO TEAM UP

Snooker
ENGLAND’S Mark Selby and Stuart Bingham will be the World Cup ‘Dream Team’ there to be shot at by the rest for the revived international tournament in June.
Read MoreTHURSDAY night saw the fifth staging of the World Snooker Awards at London’s Dorchester Hotel – and it was another big evening for Stuart Bingham.
Read MoreSTUART BINGHAM proved dreams do come true by triumphing in the Betfred World Championship final at the Crucible in Sheffield on Monday night.
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY just came up short in the Betfred World Championship but his game is in the sort of shape to keep challenging for trophies in future seasons.
Read MoreSTUART BINGHAM has made a long journey to become world champion…
Read MoreFOR the latter part of the Betfred World Championships the table-fitting team at the Bristol-based World Snooker Services have had to do without one of their most experienced and popular members in Chris Barnes.
And Inside Snooker would like to join colleagues, friends and everyone else in the sport in wishing Chris a speedy recovery from a nasty injury suffered in the course of his professional duties at the Crucible this year.
While de-rigging and setting up the one-table on Wednesday night Chris saw his little finger become badly crushed by one of the very heavy slate slabs that form part of the unit.
He was rushed to A&E in an ambulance, and medical staff have assessed him continually hoping to save the tip of his finger, with surgery on the agenda in the next couple of days.
As with the other table-fitters Chris spends the year travelling around the world as a key member of an often unsung team, without whose efforts none of the tournaments we watch would be possible.
Chris and his wife are also expecting a baby imminently, so could do with knowing everyone is thinking about them at this time while those in the snooker world look forward to seeing him back on the circuit as soon as possible.
And even with far more important things to focus on we are sure Chris might still have one eye on his beloved Bristol Rovers this weekend as they bid to regain Football League status via the Conference play-offs.
There were emotional scenes in Barry Hawkins’s post match press conference as he thanked his manager, Paul Mount, for all the support he has given him in recent years.
Hawkins was one of a number of players who had not fulfilled their potential before teaming up with Mount’s OnQ Promotions, which is now being wound down.
In fact, Hawkins became so choked with emotion that he was unable to get his words out but the sentiment was clear, and Mount – sat at the back of the press conference – had to wipe away a few tears himself.
Mount, a successful businessman, opened the South West Snooker Academy in Gloucester in 2010, a purpose built facility designed for events and practice. At the same time he began building his management stable, which included young players and some more experienced campaigners who were apparently going nowhere.
Hawkins is a good example of a player who has benefited from the support he has been given by Mount, his team and Terry Griffiths, director of coaching. After winning the 2012 Shootout he went on an unbelievable run – winning the Australian Open, reaching the World Championship final and becoming firmly established as one of snooker’s top players.
Financially, OnQ did not work out but Mount is keeping the SWSA having expanded the facility, now called the Capital Venue, which hosts a series of diverse events from the sporting, entertainment and corporate worlds.
The annual Pink Ribbon pro-am, in which money and awareness is raised for breast cancer charities, a cause close to Mount’s heart following the death of his sister from the disease, continues.
On his last day at the Crucible as a manager, Mount gave the media a box of chocolates as thanks for their support – but it’s the snooker world who should be thanking him. The game needs more genuine, good-hearted people who care about the sport and what they can contribute to it, rather than take from it. We wish him well for the future.
STUART BINGHAM produced the performance of his life in one of the matches of the season to reach the Betfred World Championship final after 20 years as a professional on Saturday night.
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY feels he has changed for the better as a person in the ten years since winning the world title but he remains a fearsome talent on the snooker table, as he proved by completing a 17-9 semi-final victory over Barry Hawkins at the Crucible in Sheffield on Saturday.
Read MoreWE CONSIDER Barry Hearn’s new five-year plan for snooker, announced this week…
Read MoreBefore this year’s Betfred World Championship Shaun Murphy spoke about his 2005 win, and fears he had become “a bottler” before a recent strong revival and winning the Masters.
Read MoreTWO BECOMES ONE as the Crucible arena is transformed for the semi-finals, with one table, four players and five more days to decide who becomes 2015 Betfred world champion.
Read MoreThere was an awkward moment during the exhibition match between Stephen Hendry and Ken Doherty, laid on for fans after early finishes on the Monday night of the second week in the matches featuring Ronnie O’Sullivan and Matthew Stevens, and Neil Robertson and Ali Carter.
Near the start someone shouted out from the crowd “Where’s Michaela?”, an obvious reference to the former leading and popular tour referee who resigned earlier this year for reasons that have still not been fully explained, but is believed to have involved an initial dispute over an unpaid bonus that was argued to be discretionary by her former employers World Snooker.
These exhibitions, this one refereed by Marcel Eckardt, are normally wise-cracking affairs, but the moment very briefly triggered an uncomfortable silence even from MC Dennis Taylor with leading World Snooker figures in the audience. Until the Scot decides to tell her side, people will be left guessing to some extent as to the precise nature of the split. It could be that she will sell her story for big money exclusively to a Scottish newspaper, or there may even be further developments in the pipeline. Equally there may be some confidentiality agreement in place and what is clear is that it is almost a taboo subject, and the circumstances surrounding Tabb's departure are a cause for awkwardness for officials.
Whichever is the case, Tabb has been a miss at this year’s World Championship, and did a huge amount promoting snooker in her time refereeing on the main tour, as well as serving as an inspiration to many of the women referees now coming through.
The Mercure hotel was as ever at this year’s Betfred World Championship the place where many of the players, managers, sponsors and media stayed - and the bar a favourite watering hole for plenty more besides, with the snooker family congregating in the evenings to talk over the day’s events and catch up with old friends.
But it wasn’t just the snooker crowd staying there this year, with FA Cup semi-finalists Reading, who only lost to Arsenal at Wembley to a terrible blunder from keeper Adam Federici, rolling up on the second Monday. The Royals were in the area to play Rotherham on the Tuesday night in a game crucial to the Championship survival hopes of the Yorkshire club.
Graeme Dott is a pretty regular contributor in any ‘quote of the tournament’ competition. The feisty Scot and former world champion only has to feel strongly on a subject and the soundbites just seem to spill out. The Crucible this year was no exception. When Dott was asked about his excellent record at the venue and in the longer-distance matches, he insisted he was “a Grand National horse being asked to run seven-furlong races for most of the season”, a reference to the plethora of best-of-seven contests since the New Year.
And asked about Anthony McGill, Dott said: “Anthony just loves snooker, I mean really loves it, completely and utterly, he lives and breathes it.
“Give him another 10 years and he’ll probably be like everyone else and hate it – but he’s not like that now, no battle scars and he’s like a kid in a sweetshop.”
Nick Clegg, now of course the Deputy Prime Minister and MP for Sheffield Hallam, came to the Crucible in the build-up to the 2010 General Election and gave what was widely acknowledged to be a cringe-worthy speech full of weak snooker-based puns about reds, blues and yellows. There were even some boos, and that was when he still fairly popular, and before the whole reneging on the tuition fees pledge.
Clegg was, it is understood, invited once again this year but early responses indicated he would not be coming to the Sheffield theatre again before this General Election. Wicked rumour-mongers were left speculating that this might be for fear of a far rougher ride in the tiny arena with no hiding place from a public with a long memory, and Clegg not guaranteed to hold his seat. All Liberal Democrat spokespeople asked to comment on the real reasons felt unable to do so.
Neil Robertson insisted in the press conference following his first-round 10-2 win over Jamie Jones that he was for the first time in his career “regularly leaving the club after Joe Perry and practising as hard as I ever have for the World Championship”.
Perry, who also uses Cambridge as a training base, is usually only too ready to poke some fun at his friend and rival, and dismiss some of the Australian’s wilder claims – but he admitted in the corridor that on this occasion it was all true, and the 2010 champion had been focus and dedication personified ahead of the tournament after an early exit in Beijing.
A LOOK AHEAD to the Betfred World Championship quarter-finals…
Read MoreAS DING JUNHUI prepares to play Judd Trump in the quarter-finals of the Betfred World Championship, we remember his remarkable capture of the China Open as a teenager ten years ago…
Read More‘Players appear circumstances permitting’ it says on tickets for the Betfred World Championship, which is fortunate as they may not appear very much on Monday judging by the overnight scores.
Ronnie O’Sullivan and Shaun Murphy each need just one frame to reach the quarter-finals, holding 12-4 leads over Matthew Stevens and Joe Perry respectively. Neil Robertson is two frames away with an 11-5 advantage over Ali Carter. The match most likely to turn round sees Judd Trump leading Marco Fu 10-6.
This is no one’s fault but sport at its best is dramatic and a series of processions tend not to capture the interest of casual sports fans. That’s not to say you can’t admire the excellence on show, as when a Roger Federer demolishes someone in the early rounds at Wimbledon or when Jordan Spieth cruised to victory at the US Masters, but close, tense finishes is where the World Championship produces box office moments.
Long matches at the Crucible often do this but aside from the first few days of the first round and Saturday night’s contest between Barry Hawkins and Mark Allen, much of this year’s fare has not seen the sort of nervy finishes which captivate audiences.
One change worth considering would be to have a second round match have its final two sessions on Monday. It seems odd from a media and spectator point of view to have no finishes on Sunday. Players do not as a rule like to play back-to-back sessions but 1pm and 7pm would mean a break between them and guarantee an eight frame session in the afternoon.
The finishes on Monday could yet be very close but this all feels like the calm before the storm, which will hit when the quarter-finals start on Tuesday. The last week of the World Championship is going to feature some world class talents locking cues for the £300,000 first prize.
Let’s hope we get some close contests before the trophy is presented a week on Monday.