Yes, I think I disagree as well!
I wasn't really meaning that it was 'completely different' per se (although they were my exact words) – of course the two situations are almost alike. But it is more 'excusable' – well, maybe 'understandable' is a better word – that this was someone relatively inexperienced who was losing the match healthily (and who, let's allow the benefit of the doubt here, thought this was the only frame his opponent needed) and apparently had something off-table but in-arena to contend with, than someone exceedingly experienced who was a full five frames short of defeat, maybe bringing his off-table and out-of-arena problems onto the stage.
I was really only making a few comments to encourage debate – so thanks for your reply.
And I agree, there should be a rule (if there isn't at least an implicit one already) to prevent someone from conceding a match before the due conclusion. And that would go equally for Ding as for O'Sullivan. At least Ding did see sense and complete the match; the fact that his persuader was O'Sullivan is neither here nor there.
I wasn't really meaning that it was 'completely different' per se (although they were my exact words) – of course the two situations are almost alike. But it is more 'excusable' – well, maybe 'understandable' is a better word – that this was someone relatively inexperienced who was losing the match healthily (and who, let's allow the benefit of the doubt here, thought this was the only frame his opponent needed) and apparently had something off-table but in-arena to contend with, than someone exceedingly experienced who was a full five frames short of defeat, maybe bringing his off-table and out-of-arena problems onto the stage.
I was really only making a few comments to encourage debate – so thanks for your reply.
And I agree, there should be a rule (if there isn't at least an implicit one already) to prevent someone from conceding a match before the due conclusion. And that would go equally for Ding as for O'Sullivan. At least Ding did see sense and complete the match; the fact that his persuader was O'Sullivan is neither here nor there.
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