
Defeated Ronnie O'Sullivan reveals he's leaving UK for a ‘new life'
Ronnie O'Sullivan is planning 'a new life somewhere else' after a crushing semi-final defeat at the World Snooker Championship.
He has revealed he is moving to the Middle East, admitting 'I don't know what the future looks like for me really'.
O'Sullivan's quest for an eighth Crucible title ended abruptly with a 17-7loss to Zhao Xintong.
The Chinese star dominated the match, winning all eight frames in the morning session and sealing O'Sullivan's fate in the evening.
O'Sullivan's preparation for the championship was unconventional. He had been absent from the tour since January, withdrawing mid-tournament from the Championship League after snapping his cue in frustration.
This followed a string of poor results, losing four out of five matches.
Throughout the World Championship, O'Sullivan struggled to find consistency with his new cue, going through three tips and changing both the tip and ferrule after the first session of the semi-final.
The 49-year-old admitted uncertainty about his future in the sport.
He said: 'I think I'm going to be moving out of the UK this year. A new life somewhere else.
'I'll still try and play snooker but I don't know what the future looks like for me really.
'I'm moving away soon so I'll just see how it goes. There's a lot of more important things in life to worry about than a game of snooker.
'For me, it's a big part of my life but I've got to try and figure out what my future looks like, whether it's playing or not.'
O'Sullivan said he would be moving 'away to the Middle East', but might be back in six months' time.
'Who knows,' he said.
'There are going to be a few changes in my life so we'll see how that goes.'
When asked whether he'd like to throw his cue a long distance following his exit, O'Sullivan added: 'I won't throw it.
'The merchandise people want it so it'll be up for sale. But I won't be throwing it.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
a day ago
- NBC News
With kung fu kicks and dragon masks, pro wrestlers find new fans at fight night in China
Asia American-style professional wrestling is gaining momentum in China, where Chinese history and music are woven into standard pro wrestling fare. June 6, 2025, 5:16 AM EDT By Janis Mackey Frayer BEIJING — The music blared and the crowd whooped as Alexis Lee strutted across the stage toward the ring. At just 5 feet tall, the wispy professional wrestler was dwarfed by heftier contenders, so to make her point, she pushed a spectator over in his chair and growled through her skeleton face paint. The crowd loved it. 'It's like the circus but with athletics,' Lee, a 30-year-old Singaporean, told NBC News. 'So it's entertaining, and live drama too. It's just fun.' While martial arts have a deep history in China, professional wrestling — with its raucous theatrics, shiny tights and body slams — is still fighting for recognition here. But on a recent Saturday night at a live events venue in Beijing, a special six-match bout billed as the 'Battle of the Decade' showed how far pro wrestling has come and its potential in the massive Chinese entertainment market. 'People are really starting to take pro wrestling — Chinese pro wrestling — seriously,' said Adrian Gomez, the American founder of Middle Kingdom Wrestling, one of the few pro wrestling organizations in China, and the man of the night. 'I feel this is the pinnacle of 10 years of really hard work,' said Gomez, 37, whose first-ever wrestling event in 2015 failed to draw a single paying spectator. For this event, there were all the alter egos and over-the-top moves of American-style pro wrestling that have made WWE a global brand. For the harder-to-win Chinese market, wrestlers have woven Chinese history and music into standard pro wrestling fare. Alberto Curry, from Atlanta, is better known on the Asia pro wrestling circuit as Zombie Dragon for the leathery dragon mask with wing tips that he wears. Curry admits it took some experimentation to determine what a Chinese audience wants to see. 'Nobody reacted to being a bad guy, which is weird,' a masked Curry, 36, said in an interview. 'Then I switched it, and people immediately took to it.' One of the obstacles to acceptance in China is that officials have appeared unsure whether to classify pro wrestling as actual fighting or entertainment, according to Ho Ho Lun, who was squaring off against Chinese wrestling legend The Slam in the evening's main event. 'For many years, there were no Chinese talents,' said Lun, 36, a former WWE wrestling star from the Chinese territory of Hong Kong. 'People used to only watch on TV until they found out, 'Oh, there's actually a place I can go and watch it for real.'' WWE tried breaking into the Chinese market back in 2016, and more recently signed a livestreaming deal with a mainland platform. The reach is limited, according to market intelligence firm S&P Global, as less than 10% of Chinese households with internet access have ever tuned in. 'The thing about wrestling is that it can be anything you want it to be,' said Gomez, who moved on a whim from Arizona to the northern Chinese city of Harbin 15 years ago to work as an English teacher. 'There weren't really any local leagues for pro wrestling,' he said. 'I think we've found a way to please and make Chinese people feel proud of the wrestling that's building up here.' For wrestlers, it's a fully hands-on experience, from getting ready to adjusting each other's costumes to selling their own branded merchandise before and after the show. They even helped build the ring for the event. Few felt what was at stake more than Wang Tao, who grew up in rural China and is considered a rising star among pro wrestlers. Wang rehearsed moves with his Dubai-based wrestling partner Shaheen Alshehhi and, wearing no shirt and silver streaks in his hair, quietly paced a hallway close to the ringside. 'I'm a little nervous,' he said. 'For me, this is really important.' Throughout the night, the sold-out crowd of nearly 400 people cheered, booed, swore and laughed as wrestlers delivered kung fu kicks and body blows and even spilled out of the ring onto the floor. Ho Ho Lun defeated The Slam to claim the championship belt, notching a victory for the pro wrestling scene here in the process. 'People are looking for new ways to entertain themselves,' wrestling fan Beck Jiang, 32, said of the Chinese market. 'This is a pretty awesome way.' Janis Mackey Frayer Janis Mackey Frayer is a Beijing-based correspondent for NBC News.


Metro
2 days ago
- Metro
Stephen Hendry and Ken Doherty disagree on most underrated snooker player ever
Former world champions Stephen Hendry and Ken Doherty have picked players they consider the most underrated, and both chose men who narrowly missed out on Crucible glory. Hendry reckons the player he beat in four World Championship finals does not always get the credit he deserves. Jimmy White lost six Crucible finals in total, also beaten by Steve Davis and John Parrott in the sport's biggest game, and Hendry feels the Whirlwind is unfairly remembered for his defeats rather than his brilliance. A 10-time ranking event winner and a Masters champion, Hendry also feels White continuing to play a long time past his peak means people can forget how good he was in his pomp. 'Underrated, it's quite a tough category but I'm going to say Jimmy,' Hendry said on WST's Snooker Club podcast. 'Everyone goes on about he's been in six finals and not won one but what a player he was! 'People look at the way he plays now and he's like myself, he's a shadow of what he was, but when you look back at what a player he was, he invented naughty snooker. 'The way he played, with his talent, and he's said himself about his off-table activities, but with his talent he should have won a lot more.' Doherty, who beat Hendry to win his one world title in 1997, reckons it is two-time Crucible finalist Matthew Stevens who is underrated by the snooker community. The Welshman only ever won one ranking title – the 2003 UK Championship – but was a regular at the business end of the World Championship in the late 1990s and 2000s. He also won the Masters in 2000, although he had a strange record in that event as he never got past the first round on 10 other outings. Doherty explained: 'My most underrated would probably be Matthew Stevens. He was a class player, still is a class player. 'He did win the UK, won the Masters, the only one he didn't win was this one [World Championship] and he would have been a Triple Crown winner. People forget about that. 'He was a wonderful player for so many years and loved playing at the Crucible. Had a couple of finals, a few semis, saved some of his best snooker for here. He was one of the best I've played.' Seven-time Crucible champ Hendry admits that he underrated another top player, but no longer does so after a brilliant last season. More Trending Kyren Wilson won the World Championship in 2024, in something of a surprise to the Scot, who was thoroughly impressed by how he followed up that win with four ranking titles over the next campaign. 'I'll throw in another underrated [player] that might be a weird one: Kyren Wilson,' said the 56-year-old. 'I underrated him and then he won the world title. Even after he won the world title I think I underrated him until his performances this season. 'Four titles. I didn't think he was going to be a prolific winner and he's really impressed me this year.' MORE: Anthony Hamilton reflects on epic career as Sheriff of Pottingham hands in his badge MORE: Which players could actually win World Snooker Tour's huge century of centuries bonus? MORE: Liam Pullen: In snooker only the strongest survive so you have to become one of them


BBC News
2 days ago
- BBC News
Wales U20s play for World places in England warm-up
Wales Under-20s head coach Richard Whiffin says places in his World Championship squad will be up for grabs when they take on England in a warm-up game on Friday, 6 Minto captains the side which features a number of changes from the team which beat England in the final game of the Under-20 Six Nations. Number eight Minto forms a new-look back row which includes Dragons team-mate Ryan Jones and Gloucester flanker Caio James. Former skipper Harry Beddall is among the replacements. Friday's game at Pontypool Park is the first of two warm-ups with the other a week later at Cardiff Arms Park against World Championships take place in Italy, with Wales drawn against Argentina in the opening match on 29 June. "We've had guys in camp for three weeks working super hard and they deserve an opportunity," said Wales Under-20s head coach Richard Whiffin."We said to the group at the start of the campaign we were going to use it as a selection game in terms of whittling the squad down from 45 down to 30 so there will be guys playing on Friday night putting their hands up for the plane ticket to Italy."So pressure goes onto those guys but ultimately if they can perform on Friday in a big game against England then it sets them up well for the World Cup."Speaking of handing Minto the captaincy, Whiffin added: "He is a local Pontypool guy plus we wanted to see a slightly different back row. "From the performances he put in during the Six Nations, he has certainly put his hand up for the captaincy role."