Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

World Snooker Championship 2018: Ding Junhui cruises past Xiao Guodong in first round

The world number three held a healthy 6-3 overnight lead and quickly reeled off four frames in a row to clinch a 10-3 win

Tuesday 24 April 2018 13:45 BST
Comments
Ding cruised past his compatriot without too much trouble
Ding cruised past his compatriot without too much trouble (PA)

Ding Junhui underlined his World Championship ambitions by closing out victory over Chinese compatriot Xiao Guodong in little more than an hour in the first round.

The world number three held a healthy 6-3 overnight lead and quickly reeled off four frames in a row to clinch a 10-3 win, setting up a clash with either Anthony McGill or Ryan Day next.

It was an encouraging opening display from Ding, whose bid to become the first Chinese player to go all the way in this competition saw him bounce back from an early 2-0 deficit yesterday, notching one century and seven 50-plus breaks along the way.

"I played well in the end. I just went for my shots and made some breaks. I didn't play a lot of safety, I just went for the shots without caring, it surprised me," he said.

Ding is safely through to the second round (PA)

"Xiao is always looking to beat me. You could see in the first session he played quite well at the start to lead 2-0. He's a good player, but he doesn't have that much experience of beating the top 16. He needs more experience to improve."

Ding's serene progress is in stark contrast to the fortunes of those above him in the rankings, with world number one Mark Selby already eliminated and Ronnie O'Sullivan labouring before eventually coming through.

Ding added: "I'm confident in my form but I try not to worry about form too much, I'm just looking forward to another chance. It's good to smile out there, it takes the pressure away if I play some bad shots.

"Everyone is under pressure here, but Mark Selby had the most pressure because he was the defending champion. It surprised me that he lost in the first round.

"I'd like to play Ronnie O'Sullivan later in the tournament because I want to improve myself and I want to play the hardest ones to beat, to test myself."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in