Shaun Murphy Reaches Fifth World Snooker Championship Final After Epic Victory Over John Higgins
Murphy overturns two-frame deficit in final session to beat 50-year-old Higgins 17-15, setting up final against either Mark Allen or Wu Yize
Quick Look
- Shaun Murphy defeated John Higgins 17-15 in an epic World Snooker Championship semifinal, overturning a two-frame deficit in the final session to reach his fifth final.
- The 43-year-old Murphy, winner in 2005, benefited from Higgins' crucial miss on a break of 50 in the decisive moments.
- Higgins, at 50, received praise from Murphy who called him an inspiration.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
The World Snooker Championship is held annually at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield. Murphy won his only world title in 2005, while Higgins is a four-time champion. The other semifinal between Mark Allen and Wu Yize was controversially interrupted by a 100-minute frame - the longest in Crucible history - which Steve Davis called 'an embarrassment to snooker'.
Shaun Murphy twice overturned a two-frame deficit in the final session to beat John Higgins 17-15 and seal his place in his fifth World Snooker Championship final. Murphy was forced to dredge up his best form to see off the 50-year-old Scot in a titanic tussle that looked nailed-on for a decider until Higgins fluffed a black on a break of 50. Higgins' miss gave Murphy a chance and despite a rare miss with the rest he seized on a second chance to clear to black and give himself a shot at a first title since his solitary win in 2005. Murphy told the BBC: "I just came out today knowing if I got my chances I could score. At the interval I was just saying to myself, 'you've done it before, now you can do it again'. "But John Higgins – what a player and what a man. The harder it gets out there the tougher he gets and the better he plays. If I'm half the player when I'm in my 50s, I'll be very proud." Resuming the final session 13-11 in arrears, Murphy started in scintillating fashion with two total clearances to haul level, only for the Scot to chisel out the next two to restore his two-frame lead. Murphy's fourth century of the match sparked another surge after the interval, and as Higgins began to miss some easy balls, the 43-year-old Murphy went into overdrive, winning the last four in a row to confirm victory. Higgins paid tribute to Murphy, saying: "The way Shaun hit the ball in that session was incredible. He just hits it like God. "I'm disappointed but what can you do. As you get older your action starts to go a little bit at the most extreme points of the match, but take nothing away, Shaun was awesome and he's got a great chance of going on to win it for a second time." Murphy will play either Mark Allen or Wu Yize, who resume to a finish on Saturday evening having spent the morning putting the memories of their 100-minute "embarrassment" behind them. The duo tore through the frames with Wu delivering three centuries – including two breaks of at least 140 – while Allen responded with knocks of 99 and 85 before taking the final frame of the morning to leave it perfectly poised at 11-11. It was a far cry from Friday's farcical 14th frame which became the longest in Crucible history after eight reds were left covering the black over the bottom right corner pocket, prompting former champion Steve Davis to call it "an embarrassment to snooker". The marathon had meant the pair could only play six of the eight scheduled frames in the session, which was good news for Wu, who had missed a series of simple shots as Allen hit back from 6-2 down to level at 7-7. The Chinese 22-year-old was in much better form on Saturday, starting with his 142 clearance in the opening frame, but dogged Allen consistently hit back to set up an intriguing final session later on Saturday.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Shaun Murphy will win the World Snooker Championship final
Possible · Within days
Allen vs Wu semifinal will complete on Saturday evening
Very likely · Within hours
Open Questions
- Will Murphy win his second world title?
- Can the Allen vs Wu semifinal be completed as scheduled?
- Will Wu maintain his improved form into the final session?






