Higgins into an early lead

Snooker World Championship: John Higgins swept into a 6-2 lead over struggling Mark Allen as the pair began their battle for…

Snooker World Championship:John Higgins swept into a 6-2 lead over struggling Mark Allen as the pair began their battle for a place in the final of the Betfred.com World Championship. The 33-year-old Scot dominated the first of the four sessions, making a break of 114 in the sixth frame on his way to gaining a comfortable overnight lead.

Higgins won the final three frames of the session as shock semi-finalist Allen struggled with almost every aspect of his game.

The consolation for the 23-year-old Northern Irish cueman, who knocked out pre-tournament favourite Ronnie O'Sullivan in the second round, is that there are three sessions of the first-to-17-frames match remaining and he has time to recover.

Higgins is bidding for his third Crucible title and before this match began his experience was predicted to be a telling factor, with Stephen Hendry tipping him to be champion again.

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He had a late-night finish on Wednesday when he fought from 12-11 down to defeat Mark Selby 13-12, a win he described as the greatest of his career.

And when he lost an untidy opening frame against Allen it seemed that the exertion might have been affecting him.

However, steady breaks of 40, 55 and 49 saw the Wishaw man begin to dominate, even though the play remained largely scrappy.

Neither player was particularly fluent before the mid-session interval, and concerns were raised over the state of the baize during the break.

Both had suffered terrible kicks, and the table, which was re-clothed overnight, was playing slowly.

It was ironed during the interval, and there was a notable change when the players returned.

Allen, bidding to become the first Northern Irish player to reach the final since Dennis Taylor's 1985 triumph, closed the gap to 3-2 with a break of 41.

But then Higgins's century break brought the match to life and he also edged a tight seventh frame, before a session-closing 75 left Allen trailing by four.