Wu Yize into Crucible final as Mark Allen pays for missed black in dramatic semi -final

Northern Ireland’s Allen admits he didn’t deserve to make final after missing black off his spot in 32nd frame

Mark Allen of Northern Ireland reacts during the semi-final match against Wu Yize of China at the World Snooker Championship at The Crucible Theatre in Sheffield. Photograph: George Wood/Getty Images
Mark Allen of Northern Ireland reacts during the semi-final match against Wu Yize of China at the World Snooker Championship at The Crucible Theatre in Sheffield. Photograph: George Wood/Getty Images

Mark Allen missed a simple black to book his place in his first World Snooker Championship final before falling 17-16 to young Chinese star Wu Yize in one of the most dramatic last-four finishes in Crucible history.

The 40-year-old Co Antrim man had the match at his mercy when he got on top of an error-strewn 32nd frame and required just the black off its spot to wrap up a 17-15 win.

But incredibly Allen rattled the pocket, leaving Wu an unexpected chance to haul level at 16-16 and set up a pressure-filled decider in front of a raucous Sheffield crowd.

Allen shut out his nightmare brilliantly, easing into a 47-point lead before an unlucky split on the reds left him out of position and ultimately let in the nerveless 22-year-old to cue up a brilliant 71 clearance to win 17-16 and set up a final against Shaun Murphy.

Shell-shocked Allen told BBC Sport: “You don’t deserve to be in a world final if you’re missing balls like that. It was just pure pressure, to be honest.

“Even though I’m devastated to lose that match I think the right person’s in the final. The way he plays is great for the game, he scores heavily and pots some ridiculous long balls. He’s going to win many world titles.”

Saturday’s last two sessions provided a stunning antidote to Friday night’s notorious 100-minute frame that former champion Steve Davis had dubbed an “embarrassment”.

In a session that saw two swift re-racks, Allen consistently nudged one frame clear only to be hauled back repeatedly by the free-scoring Chinese star, who drilled long reds and seemed almost impervious to the mounting pressure.

The pivotal moment looked to have arrived in frame 30 when Wu missed a simple red to the middle, letting Allen move to the brink of victory at 16-14 – only for the irresistible Wu to fire back and force the dramatic conclusion.

  • Join The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date

  • What’s making headlines in the rugby world? Listen to The Counter Ruck podcast with Nathan Johns

  • Sign up for push alerts to get the best breaking news, analysis and comment delivered to your phone