Originally Posted by vmax
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I know you have very specific and, for me, very narrow preferences about what kind of snooker you like to watch, and I'm sorry you feel like Sunday wasn't it. The thing is though, you don't represent the viewing public as a whole. If you did, we wouldn't be having this same conversation every six months or so. If you look at any thread about people's favourite matches, you will always find both extremes. Some want every match to be like the 2014 Champion of Champions final, where it's just break after break in no time at all, while others prefer something like the 2011 German Masters final, which was just a fascinating tactical battle throughout. I'm lucky enough to be able to enjoy both types, so the only thing I hope for is for the players to play to the best of their ability. Of course most finals will fall somewhere in between, and I think the Scottish Open final was actually pretty typical of what you are likely to get at this point in time. Snooker hasn't really had a major changing of the guard in the entire time since this forum has existed, and yet the game has got quicker and more attacking with every season, so much so that people now expect to see one-visit snooker in every ranking final, and a player like Selby stands out as supposedly slow and negative even though he is perfectly average. We've seen the likes of Trump, Robertson, O'Sullivan, Ding and Murphy share all the major finals between them this season, so this suggestion that snooker is somehow in trouble is really a bit much.
You are perfectly entitled to dismiss my opinion because I don't play the game, but I feel like your own experience makes you a little biased when it comes to this particular subject. You have come to value certain attributes in the game that are perfectly represented in players like Lisowski, perhaps they remind you of the way you play the game yourself or the way you think the game should ideally be played, so of course you want them to succeed. Selby, on other hand, has become the embodiment of everything you despise in snooker and you find his success difficult to accept, so you attribute it to some perceived unsportsmanlike conduct rather that admitting he was the better player on the day. The truth is, Lisowski didn't fail to produce some great level of snooker because Selby's average pace stopped his flow. He failed because he just doesn't reach that level very often, Selby or not. They could play another ten finals and Selby would win nine of them, or you could put Lisowski against a more fluid player of Selby's ability, like an O'Sullivan or a Trump, and the result would be the same. I was happy to see him raise his game over the course of last season, and his run last week has certainly confirmed that he belongs in the top16 and has the ability to win titles, but he is not going to be a serial winner until he takes another step in the right direction in the same way we've seen Trump do in recent times. It's not going to happen for him, like it's not going to happen for Un-Nooh, Brecel, Zhao Xintong, or any other player who plays in that inefficient manner.
I am not sure where you were going with that US remark, but I for one have no wish to see snooker dumbed down just to make it fit better in the American market. It would be a hopeless effort anyway. When it comes to sports, the US is pretty much removed from the rest of the world. Some of their most popular sports are played almost exclusively in the US, and they don't seem to have any particular wish for that to change. In any case, snooker has absolutely no future there, whether you stick a shot clock on it or not. I don't think people fully realise what a disaster introducing a shot clock would actually be. Snooker is a sport that thrives on tension, it thrives on those moments of anticipation before a big shot is taken, and rushing things with a shot clock is a sure way to suck all of that out of the game. The Premier League was a fine event in its time, but it failed to produce a single memorable match in its entire history after the shot clock was introduced, even though the best players in the world played in it. And that was 25 seconds. A 20-second shot clock would be completely ridiculous in the context of today's game. Of the 128 professionals, only 11 have an average shot time lower than that, and only O'Sullivan and Un-Nooh are under 18 seconds. Lisowski himself is barely under 20, which means a good percentage of his shots take longer than that. And of course there is a huge discrepancy from one shot to another in snooker, in terms of how long they take to play, so a shot clock just takes some of subtlety out of the game. Granted, this would give Lisowski a decent chance of doing as well or better than Selby, but at the price of killing snooker as we know it? No thank you. I don't care much for your other two rule changes either, but we've had those discussions a millions times before on TSF over the years...
And I've probably defended Selby a million times as well. Actually, in the past I used to more often defend his right to slow the game down and make it scrappy when it suited him. The latter cannot actually be sanctioned under any circumstances as far as I'm concerned, because it comes down to shot selection, which is completely up to each individual player. Either a shot is legal under the rules of snooker or it's not. You can't have a shot that is perfectly legal but somehow ungentlemanly at the same time. What kind of game would that be? As for playing at an unacceptably slow pace, of course there has to be a line somewhere, but it's nowhere near Selby and it never was. If Selby got told to speed up, so would half of the tour. How could someone like Anthony Hamilton, for example, even get through a single match? I'm more patient that most when it comes to this kind of thing, but even I have to admit that his play in the 2017 German Masters final was only just within the bounds of good taste. In fact, it was everything you usually accuse Selby of doing, but there was no outrage on this forum at the time. Nor did I expect any. I think it's just human nature to root for the underdog, and much easier to overlook stuff like that when it involves a player you like.
The days when Selby was an underdog are long gone. In fact, it was said a lot last week that Selby won more titles than anyone else this decade, and he also spent seven years as world number 1, so it's not surprising that there is a large group of people who dislike him. It's just something that happens in sports in general, it seems to bring great joy to a lot of people to have someone they can "hate". Unfortunately this has resulted in people not only criticising Selby when he does something objectionable, but also finding all kinds of controversy even where there is none. Was it last season when we discussed average shot times and you remained unconvinced about Selby's being average even in the face of empirical evidence? And now you say those times count for nothing because he has "seen a way around it". What does that even mean? We know his actual execution of the shot is not the fastest, so if he indeed walks around the table excessively to look at angles and stuff like that, how exactly does he cheat the system to appear faster than he is? I mean, there is footage of the Scottish Open final available online, so if anyone has actual examples of Selby doing something ungentlemanly that could possibly warrant Lisowski complaining to the referee, feel free to point them out. Joking after a fluke is not exactly a huge offence, is it?
I don't know, I don't really see what it is about Selby that brings out such strong emotions... This is a guy who studied the table for more than six minutes on a mildly tricky safety shot a few weeks ago against Higgins, but, other than slight amusement, there wasn't much reaction to that on here. Might be because there are so few of us left, but I suspect people also just don't care that much when he goes on to lose the match anyway. He once played on for something like 13 snookers in the final frame of the middle session at the Crucible for no apparent reason, and that was quickly forgotten too since he was beaten heavily. But when he wins, all kinds of stuff gets brought up. I remember when he came back from behind to beat Dott in the semi-finals of the Masters in 2013, one poster described him as a "cancer" that you can't fight forever, another one said that he only watched the match in the hope that an audience member would snap and beat Selby up, and I also seem to remember someone suggesting it would be great if Selby had a heart attack during a match. Just completely over the top reactions to a snooker match you are watching voluntarily. But then again, some people described that same match as one of the best of the season, which just goes back to my first point. Every person has their own preferences, so if you don't like a certain type of match or you don't want to see a particular player win, there is no need to get worked up about it. There is usually another event just around the corner anyway. :wink:
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