The UK Championship quarter-final between Mark Selby and John Higgins delivered on every level – and also sparked a new storm over how live snooker is covered on the BBC.
Read MoreSTRICTLY SNOOKERED AS SELBY CLIMAX IS CUT BY BBC

Snooker
The UK Championship quarter-final between Mark Selby and John Higgins delivered on every level – and also sparked a new storm over how live snooker is covered on the BBC.
Read MoreAll four Betway UK Championship quarter-finals take place on Friday at York’s Barbican Centre and there looks to be something for everyone.
Read MoreEvery now and again in the media centre at the snooker there is a full-on statto challenge thrown down.
In days gone by it would have been Phil Yates or Dave Hendon that would sorted this kind of thing out, currently it would usually be Matt Huart, formerly of ProSnookerBlog fame and now on the WPBSA payroll (perhaps for being officially the only person who truly understands the minutiae of the ranking systems and qualification criteria in all their forms).
The hapless hacks in here occasionally come up with a half-decent possible idea for a story, and then Matt kindly puts some flesh on the statistical bones – either confirming this line of enquiry is yielding something interesting, or politely shooting it down in flames as being a total waste of time.
A lot of these conversations are hypotheticals and we had one such discussion yesterday as Ronnie O’Sullivan raced into the quarter-finals for the loss of just three frames. What, I asked Matt, was the fewest number of frames that had been conceded in winning a UK title?
Now generally I have to confess, and many would confirm, stats are not top of my agenda, being naturally more drawn to the occasion, the result, the atmosphere, the agony and the ecstasy sport can generate, and hearing from the lead actors, the players.
But without question there are times when the statistic IS the story, especially when it comes to making history or setting records.
As another example I recently got a peek at the average shot time list for the season up to the UK Championship - and any self-respecting journalist could make a story out of who was top and bottom of that list (wait and see - or just have a guess...).
If there is one thing a statto loves though it is consistency, a basis of comparison that is like for like – and on this front we quickly ran into problems on the whole ‘fewest frames conceded by a UK winner’ question.
In the UK over the years you have had players coming in at a last 16, last 32, and last 128 stage. You have had finals that were best of 31 frames, or best of 19. You have had early-round matches that were best of 17 frames, or best of 11. You have had players winning four matches to lift the trophy, or seven.
Often Matt’s travails start with him working back from a first guess and then seeing if it can be beaten. In this case the starting point was Stephen Maguire in 2004 (19 frames, a 32-player draw, best of 17 frame matches up to best of 19 frame final).
That was then beaten by Doug Mountjoy in 1978 (18 frames, a 16-player draw for him, best of 17 then a best of 29 final).
Steve Davis dropped just 14 frames in 1980 plus one in an earlier qualifier, and Stephen Hendry 12 in 1995. For Davis this was a 16-player draw, best of 17 followed by a best of 31 final. And for Hendry it was a 32-player draw, best of 17 and then a best of 19 final (although he did win a qualifier too earlier pre-venue, technically dropping a further three frames to Jamie Burnett).
But Davis wins the prize for his 1981 effort in a 16-player draw, offering up just 10 frames in beating Willie Thorne 9-2, Bill Werbeniuk 9-5, Jimmy White 9-0 and then Terry Griffiths 16-3.
You could also note that the current 128-player format with best of 11s and a best of 19 final means the same number of frames have to be won as when it was a 32-player draw, best of 17s until a best of 19 final (46 in total).
But the truth of it is that is about half an hour of all of our lives - and now another 20 minutes of mine - that I will never get back.
Considering the fuss made of Andy Murray for making it to No1 in tennis it must surely be worth doffing the cap in the direction of Mark Selby.
Read MoreA match does not always have to end in victory for it to matter - that was the case for John Higgins against Mark Allen at the 2015 Masters.
Read MoreAn opportunity from the Betway UK Championship in York to give a brief update on the site and apologise for any frustration for the recent inactivity.
Read MoreAll titles are sweet – but there is something about beating the best around either in the final or during the tournament that makes them taste even sweeter.
Read MoreNEIL ROBERTSON’S 10-5 victory over Liang Wenbo at York on Sunday night makes him the eighth player to have won the UK Championship title on more than one occasion.
Read MoreFOR THE FIRST TIME in its 39 stagings, the UK Championship final will be between two non-British players.
Read MoreThe drive to improve table conditions will crank up a notch at the European Tour event in Gibraltar in December when a ball-polishing machine is trialled.
Read MoreWhen Terry Griffiths announced his ‘freelance’ coaching stable of six players in the summer, the name of Michael Holt was one that caught the eye.
Read MoreRisking opening a hornet's nest, we have a go at listing the game's current 'Top Five Snooker Ambassadors'.
Read MoreTHE UK CHAMPIONSHIP is one of those markers for British snooker fans that winter is coming, Christmas is around the corner and the season is moving into full gear.
Read MoreStuart Bingham is warming up for his Betway UK Championship campaign with a first trip to Romania this weekend – and exhibition matches against Ronnie O’Sullivan.
Read MoreRONNIE O’SULLIVAN will not defend his UK Championship title next month as his sabbatical from professional snooker continues due to private unresolved personal issues.
Read MoreRONNIE O’SULLIVAN – that great snooker colossus – bestrides the sport once again tonight after winning a thrilling Coral UK Championship final, one of the most dramatic big occasion matches of his glittering career.
Read MoreRobin Park, Wigan cannot boast the snooker tradition of a Crucible, a Barbican Centre, a Wembley Conference Centre or the nearby Preston Guildhall. But as the Coral UK Championship moved to a conclusion the likelihood that it might just bear witness to a piece of history were increasing.
With Ronnie O’Sullivan homing in on Stephen Hendry’s all-time career centuries record and having entered the German Masters, the qualifiers with up to two matches for the Rocket trying to reach the Tempodrom in Berlin are to be played at the Sports Arena over December 17-19.
In terms of the publicity attracted snooker was lucky that Neil Robertson’s 100th century of the season last term came at the Crucible, and in many ways the Masters – one of O’Sullivan’s favourite tournaments, and where Hendry would be commentating – might be a suitably grand setting for equalling or beating the record.
However that will not be the view in Wigan, where fans turning up to watch free of charge may get very good value indeed.
That sound you can hear is millions of mouths watering as the snooker world gets ready for Ronnie O’Sullivan and Judd Trump to contest the Coral UK Championship final at the Barbican Centre in York on Sunday.
Read MoreThere have been a couple of strong late contenders for snooker quote of the year at the Coral UK Championship.
Ronnie O’Sullivan, furious at himself for sustaining a bad ankle injury out running days before a major snooker tournament, reminded himself after hobbling round the table to beat Daniel Wells: “I’m a snooker player, not a f*****g runner.”
Then after dumping out BBC pundits Steve Davis and Ken Doherty, Ricky Walden came out with: “I seem to be getting drawn against all the BBC commentators, maybe it will be Hazel Irvine in the next round.”
But surely top of the pile was Matt Selt, hearing after his 6-0 whitewash at the hands of Ronnie O’Sullivan including a 147 maximum break, that he might be contacted by the WPBSA disciplinary bosses for the scruffy state of his bow tie in that match.
Selt joked: “It was a bit scruffy. But the WPBSA represent me – they should be giving me some free counselling after that drubbing from the Rocket on national TV, not fining me over my tie.”
RONNIE O’Sullivan picked himself up off the canvas just in time against Stuart Bingham on Saturday afternoon to reach the final of the Coral UK Championship.
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