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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Sports
Robertson tops Liang in UK final
     2015-December-8  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

 

   AUSTRALIA’S Neil Robertson became the first player to make a maximum 147 break in a U.K. Championship final on his way to beating China’s Liang Wenbo 10-5 in York on Sunday.

    The left-handed Australian, 33, made the maximum in the sixth frame as he dominated the final against the Chinese outsider in the first U.K. Championship final between two overseas players.

    Robertson was 5-3 up at the interval in the best-of-19 final.

    And although he made hard work of the final, Robertson was the class act of the tournament, richly deserving victory at the ranking event, which is second only to the World Championship in prestige.

    Along with a 150,000-pound (US$224,000) winner’s prize money, Robertson snatched the bonus of 44,000 pounds for making an immaculate 147 break in the sixth frame. It was the first maximum made in a final of any of the game’s Triple Crown tournaments: the Masters, World Championship and U.K. Championship.

    Robertson took this title in 2013, when he defeated Mark Selby, who played the role of his whitewashed semifinal victim this time. After a 6-0 victory Saturday evening Robertson said he would play computer games into the early hours before bedding down for the night.

    He went about his perfect clearance with such precision it was close to virtual-reality snooker, Robertson exercising such unflinching control over the cue ball. The plant he made to pot the ninth red was never in doubt and the punch of the air in delight was richly deserved, as was the standing ovation from the York Barbican Center crowd. “It gives you such a buzz to make a 147,” Robertson said afterwards.

    Even Liang joined in, clapping and then hugging his opponent, who now has managed three maximums in his career. Robertson was almost on the receiving end of a 147 earlier in the tournament when Thepchaiya Un-Nooh missed the black off its spot as he lost his nerve with the prospect of glory looming.

    While he could sympathize with Un-Nooh at the time, Robertson ultimately had cause to be grateful for that miss. He would have had to share the spoils of his own masterful break had Un-Nooh slotted that seemingly straightforward ball during their third-round encounter.

    At breakfast time in Beijing yesterday, Chinese snooker fans were waking to their No. 2 player playing the biggest match of his life and clinging on gallantly, until from 7-5 the dream began to slip away. A run of 110 from Liang should have eased any nerves but it was going to take something special to overcome Robertson, and inconsistency ultimately cost the underdog.

    Robertson was struggling until the closing stages to put away the world No. 29, and champion-turned-pundit Stephen Hendry suggested the 33-year-old was failing to stamp his authority, saying it would be “one thrown away” if he failed to land the title.(SD-Agencies)

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