10 June 2020

Judd Trump happy to defend his World Championship title anywhere

10 June 2020

Judd Trump would have no problem with the World Championship taking place behind closed doors as he revealed he would be satisfied with defending his title “in a car park somewhere”.

The world number returned to the baize in the Championship League, where there are no spectators because of the stringent protocols behind snooker’s resumption amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Hushed silences are a common theme in snooker, interrupted intermittently by occasional cheers and more general applause, and it is for that reason why Trump feels there is little difference in the ‘new normal’.

If that extends into the defence of the title he won last year at the Crucible, which has been rescheduled to take place between July 31 and August 16, then so be it.

“I’d be happy to defend it in a car park somewhere,” said Trump, who failed to reach Thursday’s Championship League final day. “I don’t really care. As long as it’s on, it doesn’t really matter where it is.

“It’s the same for all the players, we’re just happy to be out there playing. It doesn’t really matter what’s going on, we’re just here in our little zone in this tournament and it’s just good for everyone involved.

“There’s not a real difference playing with a crowd, it doesn’t make too much difference for anyone.

“I think this could work for every tournament. Snooker doesn’t necessarily need to have a crowd in every single tournament and it works on TV, it looks good on TV.”

The lack of spectators is most noticeable once someone has successfully made a long pot or played a particularly good snooker.

But Trump added: “You just don’t notice those kinds of things.

“The only way you do is if your concentration’s not great but when you’re in amongst the balls and potting balls, to be honest I just completely forget that there normally is a crowd there.”

Ryan Day finished top of Trump’s group in the second phase in Milton Keynes after beating the world number one 3-0 in the opening match.

Trump bounced back with a 3-1 win over Barry Hawkins but lost the final frame in a 2-2 draw with David Gilbert after his opponent racked up a 120 break, seven shots away from a maximum.

Day only needed one frame in the group decider against Hawkins and got it at the first time of asking.

One victory proved enough for Luca Brecel as the Belgian progressed from Group A.

The 25-year-old opened up with a 2-2 draw with Mark Joyce before sealing his only win in a 3-1 triumph over Ashley Carty before another stalemate with Gary Wilson.

Carty had started with a 3-1 success of Wilson and, after his loss to Brecel, needed to defeat Joyce in the final round-robin to secure his place in the next round.

However, Joyce, who was whitewashed 3-0 by Wilson earlier in the day, secured the first two frames to end Carty’s hopes of advancing.

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