Kyren Wilson held his nerve to sink a century in the deciding frame and end Ronnie O’Sullivan’s chances of winning a record eighth UK Championship title in York. Wilson summoned a nerveless 102 for victory after O’Sullivan, who had looked ill at ease throughout their quarter-final clash, clawed back two frames in a row to haul the match level at 5-5. The 45-year-old took frequent breaks throughout the match, insisting to referee Jan Verhaas that he was distracted by movement in the audience during frame-breaks in the second match in the two-table arena. O’Sullivan also demanded a photographer be removed from the arena floor, flagging up that he did not have a tripod. Afterwards, he told Eurosport: “I’ve said that unless they have a tripod they are not welcome. It’s not a lot to ask, if you are a cameraman it should be standard stuff to be carrying about so maybe he should go to the professional and get his kit right.” Wilson, seeking a place in his first UK semi-final and only a fourth win over O’Sullivan in 11 attempts, had got off to a flying start with breaks of 92 and 117 to establish a 2-0 lead. O’Sullivan staged his first sit-down protest early in the fourth frame but it did little to detract from his momentum as he returned to polish off a century of his own and haul the match back level at 2-2. After sharing the next two frames, O’Sullivan’s frustration boiled over again early in the seventh, when he insisted the photographer be ejected. Twice more O’Sullivan returned to his seat in the eighth frame, during a break in play in the match next door. O’Sullivan told Verhaas: “It’s the noise - I’d rather they all sit down, I’m in no rush.” A rash safety from O’Sullivan allowed Wilson to produce a 39 clearance and move one frame from victory, but he blew his first chance of wrapping up the win after running out of position on a break of 35. O’Sullivan duly summoned a 64 clearance to reduce the deficit to one frame, then forced the decider with a cool clearance of 83, punctuated by another short break as the action ebbed on the other table. But it was Wilson who rose to the occasion, clenching his fist midway through his final-frame century which sealed a last-four clash against Belgium’s Luca Brecel, who beat Anthony McGill 6-2. Wilson said: “I’m super-proud. At 5-3 things were starting to go a little bit against me and it’s only human to start to think your time has gone. “I’m kind of fighting myself and starting to think I could have won this one, I’ve let another one slip against him, because I have let a couple slip against Ronnie, so to hold it together and take it out convincingly, there’s no better feeling.” Wilson insisted he was not distracted by O’Sullivan’s antics, but admitted: “I just wanted to get on with it. I understand his reasoning for that. But when the crowd were up on my turn I just got on with it and I did a pretty good job.” On the interruptions, O’Sullivan said: “I’d rather just sit down and wait. I said to the referee, we’re in no rush. I’m here to play snooker and there’s no time limit on how long the match takes. “It doesn’t bother me. I play in good venues and bad venues, it is what it is. I don’t even care enough to have an opinion on it. It is what it is – just keep eating the smoked salmon and cream cheese.” Rising star Zhao Xintong reeled off six frames in a row to overcome Jack Lisowski 6-2 and reach the biggest semi-final of his career. The Chinese 24-year-old, rated by the likes of O’Sullivan and Jimmy White as the hottest prospect in the sport, fell 2-0 down as Lisowski made an encouraging start with breaks of 79 and 63. But Lisowski, still widely regarded as the best player yet to win a ranking event, was guilty of missing too many chances and Zhao fired back in a scintillating fashion, with four half-centuries, culminating in an 83 in the final frame, to seal his win.
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