SHAUN MURPHY won his first full ranking title for three years with a dramatic 10-6 triumph over Mark Selby in the final of the Haikou World Open on Sunday.
Read MoreMURPHY TRIUMPHS IN WORLD OPEN FINAL

Snooker
SHAUN MURPHY won his first full ranking title for three years with a dramatic 10-6 triumph over Mark Selby in the final of the Haikou World Open on Sunday.
Read MoreWe look ahead to Sunday’s Haikou World Open final as Mark Selby does battle with Shaun Murphy…
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY survived more black ball drama to secure his place in Haikou World Open final on Saturday.
Read MoreMARK ALLEN kept his hopes of a hat-trick of Haikou World Open titles alive on Friday as he moved into the semi-finals in China.
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY dealt a blow to Jimmy White’s hopes of tour survival by beating the Whirlwind 5-1 in the last 64 of the Haikou World Open on Tuesday.
Read MoreThe Ronnie O’Sullivan ‘forgotten chalk’ narrow escape at the mid-session interval of his BetVictor Welsh Open semi-final against Barry Hawkins saw the world champion rush back to his cue case and back with around 15 seconds to spare before the players were ushered into the arena.
But with the Rocket himself raising the infamous Shaun Murphy/Stephen Maguire situation, now fully a decade go at the 2004 Grand Prix, in his post-match press conference it is probably worth clarifying both the rules and what actually happened in that incident.
There are effectively two ways a player can be docked a frame on this issue, by the tournament director for not being ready to play, or by the referee once the frame has started. Maguire was penalised for not being ready in the first place, so would have been docked a frame whether or not Murphy had spoken to referee Johan Oomen.
The fact that he did has caused him a lot of damage to his reputation, because other players were always going to see that as an unsportsmanlike attempt to ‘steal’ a frame. Murphy himself protested he only asked where Maguire was. The referee fed back to the tournament office that Murphy had brought up the question of the rules, so it became almost a case of who to believe.
Once the frame has started the referee is in charge and has discretion, and does not have to ask the opponent if they consent to a player going back to get their chalk. They can make that decision themselves, and either let the player go immediately, or make him wait until the end of the frame. Technically the referee has the power to dock a player a frame for this, but that is not the advice currently given and in practice would be very unlikely to happen.
SHAUN MURPHY reached the second round of the BetVictor Welsh Open in just 57 minutes on Friday.
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY kept his fine recent run going – but only just as he prevailed in a deciding frame to qualify for the final stages of the China Open at the Capital Venue in Gloucester on Monday.
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY capped a fine few days by winning group 5 of the Championship League at Crondon Park Golf Club in Essex on Tuesday night.
Read MoreIT always seemed likely that Shaun Murphy’s next title would be worth a lot more than the money involved.
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY returned to snooker’s winners’ circle with a 4-1 victory over Fergal O’Brien in the final of the Gdynia Open in Poland on Sunday night.
Read MoreMARK SELBY reached his fifth Dafabet Masters final in seven years with a comprehensive 6-1 defeat of Shaun Murphy at Alexandra Palace in London on Saturday.
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY won another dramatic battle at Alexandra Palace to reach the quarter-finals of the Dafabet Masters on Tuesday.
Read MoreSHAUN MURPHY readily admits that 2013 was a year he was glad to see the back of, a period of intense frustration that saw the 2005 world champion suffer a series of early exits this season and fail to reach a major final for 12 months.
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