
Michael Smith causes unwanted shock by not qualifying for World Matchplay
It's the first time in 12 years that the 34-year-old will have failed to make it to the oche, after performing badly in the Players Championship 21.
Needing to make at least the last four of that Leicester-based tournament 'Bully Boy', as he is known, went out in the first round to Thibault Tricole and misses another chance to lift the World Matchplay for the first time.
Although his best finish at Blackpool was when runner-up to Rob Cross in the 2019 final, it's been taken as read that he'd be there each year, along with many of the big names from the sport.
Just two years after being the world's number one player, Smith will miss out, his ranking now as low as 21. He could drop even lower than that, depending on how others perform on the west coast.
Smith's fall from grace has amazed fellow archer Matt Edgar, who said on his YouTube channel Edgar TV: 'Most surprisingly, the number one seed from two years ago hasn't qualified. Crazy, I know.
"I still can't believe this: two years ago, Michael Smith was the number one seed at the World Matchplay. Now, he's not even in the event. How does that happen? It's madness.
"The prize money from that run – where he reached the second round – is now coming off. He beat Steve Beaton 10-2, then lost a high-quality game 11-10 to Chris Dobey.
'That means £15,000 comes off Smith's ranking, and that could drop him down to world number 23 by the end of this event. It could be even lower depending on results. Just let that sink in – from world number one to world number 23 in two years."
However, Edgar did have a positive outlook for Smith, adding: '(he) could definitely turn it around – he's got the quality, a former world champion and multiple-time winner.
'He could easily get back into the top 16 next year with a form turnaround and the prize money cycle shifting."

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


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
England must beware surging Sweden: this will not be an easy quarter-final
England's 4-0 win against Sweden in their Euro 2022 semi-final, with that iconic Alessia Russo backheel and the sound of Sweet Caroline ringing around Bramall Lane, will be etched into many Swedish heads when the two teams meet on Thursday. And England must not underestimate that feeling for the Swedes. It was a humiliating defeat for Peter Gerhardsson's team but they are in a much better place now than three years ago. They have really impressed in this competition so far and they are on a 15-game unbeaten run that has lasted just over a year. There is a danger of England thinking: 'Oh, we've beaten this lot in the last Euros.' As a coach I always worry about a wounded team and I think Sweden are that, and I can say this categorically: Swedish players are the most tactical players I've coached, the most studious players, the most team‑oriented players, and they leave their ego at the door. For those reasons, they're a threat to every team, and they're a big threat to England in this fantastic quarter-final in Zurich. When I look at my own analysis, and I look at individuals, if you take the top 150 players in the world, of the teams in this tournament, Sweden would rank as the seventh best, but they are much stronger as a sum of their parts, as a team. Before their last game against Germany, they were ranked as fourth favourites to win the title, so this is a group that have 'team' at the centre of everything they do. They'll be highly tactical and organised out of possession. Their midfielder Kosovare Asllani has been exceptional and so has Filippa Angeldal. In Nathalie Björn they have a leader at the back who is competent in possession but also really good at running a defensive line. The midfielder Johanna Rytting Kaneryd has been playing well and was particularly impressive against Poland. So I think this is a tougher test for England than it would have been against Germany – not because I don't rate Germany – I think they are wonderful going forward – but I think they're so vulnerable defensively, whereas Sweden are stingy as hell in defence. Don't think: 'Oh, good, we've avoided Germany.' No, this is a game nobody would take lightly. As a coach, England are the better team and they are the favourites but they're playing against a Sweden team with far greater organisation than England faced against Wales or the Netherlands, and the things that have hurt the holders, the physical pace and power of France, are threats that Sweden pose too in transitional moments. Since the last European Championship, Sweden have also brought through the right players and they've found another real player in Smilla Holmberg, the right-back. I think she's got everything to go the whole way. It is Gerhardsson's final tournament with the team but there's a consistency in his setup. He's worked with his strongest eight or nine players for a period of time so there's a real understanding between them, he's calm and consistent in his approach, and I think he will have learned a lot from those failures in 2022. England 4-0 Sweden, 26 July 2022, Sheffield "One of the best goals you will ever see," the former England defender Stephen Warnock said – and few disagreed. Alessia Russo's audacious backheel nutmeg sealed England's third in style, a goal of the tournament winner from the bench. The Euro 2022 semi-final against Sweden played out like a dream: Beth Mead opened the scoring, Lucy Bronze powered in a header, and Fran Kirby's clever lob capped it off. Four goals, four statements. The Lionesses were ruthless. Sweden simply had no reply. England 1-1 Sweden, 5 April 2024, London Sweden looked nothing like the side torn apart at Euro 2022. In a closely contested qualifier, they held firm against an England team dominant in possession but short on chances. Alessia Russo, once again in imperious form, broke through with a striker's dream – a one-on-one calmly slotted home. Both sides grew bolder as the game wore on. A moment's lapse from the Lionesses and Sweden's rising star Rosa Kafaji Roflo punished them with an electric equaliser – well-earned. Sweden 0-0 England, 16 July 2024, Gothenburg It may have ended goalless but England got what they came for. A draw in Gothenburg sealed their place at Euro 2025. "Keeping it to 0-0, qualifying from a very hard group – I'm very relieved," the head coach, Sarina Wiegman, said. The Lionesses impressed early but faded, relying on the goalkeeper Hannah Hampton to keep their clean sheet. Georgia Stanway came closest to scoring with a strike from distance. Sweden, backed by a lively home crowd, failed to capitalise on the buzz. Nasra Abdi He's not a big risk-taker. I could very much see Sweden set up in an organised block but it'll be interesting to see how low they sit. Will they really just absorb pressure and allow England to have the ball? On Saturday, Sweden beat the Germany press and got up against a backline which wasn't the quickest. It is similar with England. Sarina Wiegman's side will be very aggressive with lots of players up high, very aggressive in the counterpress, and if Sweden solve this situation like France did, then I think you're going to see similarly tough moments for England to defend. But it will be interesting to see what Sweden have learned because they play in a really compact 4-4-2 and if you don't get those distances right England will pick you off in the pockets. Especially Lauren James. When she is in the mood she was in against Wales, and she's in 'that place', she's enjoying her football, we all know she's one of the best players in the world. She's been brilliant. Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion Also, this is the best place I've ever seen Ella Toone in, for England. She's been hugely impactful for the team. She is exploiting the spaces between the full-backs and the centre-backs, and those runs from deep are really helping England. I think she's playing with the bit between her teeth. She's got a bit of a chip in her performance, and I like that side of Ella Toone. She seems more mature, focused and like someone who obviously has a natural telepathy with Alessia Russo. You can see how much they care for each other as friends, but also how they know each other's game inside out. That's really helpful because maybe Russo is taking up so much attention from defenders and giving a bit more space for Ella. At the opposite end of the pitch, England have to be wary of Stina Blackstenius. She was a nightmare to play against. In fact, when I was the Chelsea manager, we were always grateful when she wasn't in the starting lineup for Arsenal. She makes it that much harder for you as a team to be so high up the pitch, because of her channel runs. She's also improved in the little movements, to stay onside. I always thought she was a player that drifted offside a lot but I think she's brought a lot of what we call double movements into her game – ie, lots of running across a line onside – and she's got better at holding those runs to stay onside. And she's been clinical. I think she's at her best level yet. I always rated her decisiveness and being clinical – she's got everything in her locker. She's good if you've got balls coming into the box, she's good at running in behind and she now looks a more complete player. Whoever wins this quarter-final will be the favourites for their semi‑final and should be expected to make the final, but football isn't that straightforward. What is important to say is that the quality of the quarter-finalists compared with Euro 2022 is so much higher. Italy's performance against Spain in the group stage showed that finally years of work on their domestic league is bearing fruit. And France, phwoar, it'll take a lot to beat France. I can't wait to watch them against Germany and the other match-ups.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Cruz Hewitt is already showing the stress of trying to follow in his dad's footsteps. Now, tennis legend Pat Cash tells HENRY CLARK he faces a recipe for disaster
The kid in the backwards white baseball cap raced towards the net, poked the ball into the open court and watched as the scoreboard ticked over for his first points of the match. Cruz Hewitt clenched his fist and punched the air in front of him. It's a scene the more seasoned Wimbledon crowds know well - the fist pump once performed by the man sitting beneath a cap and sunglasses on the benches near Court No. 5, and to whom his son's gesture was unmistakably aimed.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
The Media Show Afghan data breach superinjunction, Future of the BBC, Tour de France
This week a super-injunction was lifted that allowed the press to report on a story it's known about for some time – the Ministry of Defence's leaking of personal details of almost 19,000 Afghan people who had applied to move to the UK. The Times's Larisa Brown tells us how she, alongside other journalists, fought the super-injunction. The BBC's Annual Report has contained some good news for the organisation, but has been overshadowed by recent controversies. We assess its future with the BBC's former Editorial Director, Roger Mosey, and The Financial Times's Daniel Thomas. As new TV show Shark! Celebrity Infested Waters begins on ITV, we hear from creative director of Plimsoll Productions Andrea Jackson about what it takes to develop a new format blending entertainment and natural history. This is the last year that the Tour de France will be on free-to-air TV in the UK. Rachel Jary, staff writer at Rouleur, and Chris Boardman, Active Travel Commissioner and former racing cyclist, discuss how the media covers the race. Producer: Lucy Wai Assistant Producers: Emily Channon and Martha Owen