Who is Wu Yize? China’s ‘new superstar’ tipped by Ronnie O’Sullivan to win the World Snooker Championship
Wu Yize hails from Lanzhou in the northwest of China, a city famous for its beef noodles. It is a clear beef broth with radish slices, chilli oil and herbs, and aside from his family, it is the thing he misses most: there are plenty of Chinese restaurants in Sheffield, but they don’t do it like home.
It is a small cost for being one of the best young snooker players in the world. Wu moved his life to Yorkshire three years ago to be part of the growing stable of Chinese players in the city, and he could be the next superstar from the group.
The 22-year-old reached finals at the English Open and Scottish Open last season, and comes into the World Snooker Championship as the 10th seed and among the contenders for the title.
Read Lawrence Ostlere’s full profile of Wu:
Luke Baker21 April 2026 12:45
Latest score: Judd Trump 2-4 Gary Wilson
Gary Wilson is still looking impressive against world No 1 Judd Trump and has maintained his two-frame lead.
Wilson actually stretched his advantage to 4-1 with a brilliant clearance of 139 in the first frame after the mid-session interval, although Trump claimed the sixth frame to bring it back to 4-2.
A crucial final three frames of the session upcoming. Can Trump get back on terms or will the world No 27 put his foot on the throat of his opponent
Luke Baker21 April 2026 12:29
Why Zhao Xintong is the man to finally break the ‘Crucible Curse’
The “Crucible Curse” is snooker’s most famous hex. Twenty men who have won their first World Snooker Championship title at the iconic Crucible Theatre since the tournament moved there in 1977 have tried to defend it the next year. All 20 have failed.
Everyone, from surprise, one-off champions to the greatest of all time who would go on to dominate their era have fallen short the year after their first world crown.
But Zhao Xintong might just be different…
Luke Baker21 April 2026 12:07
Latest score: Gary Wilson surges into lead over Judd Trump
Speaking of seeds, the world No 1 and second seed (with reigning champion Zhao Xintong automatically being top seed) Judd Trump is in action in the morning session.
But it’s been a great start for his opponent Gary Wilson, perhaps the most dangerous qualifier in the tournament – certainly one of the most decorated with three ranking titles to his name.
Wilson has surged into a 3-1 lead, including a break of 77 in the opening frame. He’s looking composed out there. Plenty of time for Trump to respond though.
Meanwhile, on the other table, 20-year-old debutant Liam Pullen won the very first frame he played at the Crucible to lead Chris Wakelin early on but the 13th seed has hit back, including getting the snooker he needed on the final pink in frame two, to take a 3-1 lead into the mid-session interval.
Luke Baker21 April 2026 11:47
First round results
Half the first-round matches have now been completed at the Crucible and we’ve got a unique situation brewing. So far, every single seeded player has won their match – normally he first round is an absolute bloodbath for the higher-ranked players.
Never in the history of the World Championship has there been a clean sweep of all 16 seeds reaching the second round. Will we see it this year? Surely not…
Zhao Xintong (1) 10-7 Liam Highfield
Mark Allen (14) 10-6 Zhang Anda
Barry Hawkins (11) 10-4 Matthew Stevens
Xiao Guodong (9) 10-6 Zhou Yuelong
Mark Williams (6) 10-4 Antoni Kowalski
Ding Junhui (16) 10-5 David Gilbert
John Higgins (5) 10-7 Ali Carter
Kyren Wilson (3) 10-7 Stan Moody
Luke Baker21 April 2026 11:38
Shaun Murphy criticises Ronnie O’Sullivan and Judd Trump’s conduct before World Snooker Championship
Shaun Murphy has criticised fellow former world champions Ronnie O’Sullivan and Judd Trump for missing the launch of the 2026 World Championship in Sheffield.
This year’s players gathered in Tudor Square outside the Crucible Theatre on Friday for a green-carpet ceremony celebrating the relationship between snooker and Sheffield, before media commitments with press and broadcasters inside the venue.
But O’Sullivan and Trump did not appear and unless they can provide a valid reason for their absence, such as a medical issue, they face a sanction from the World Snooker Tour.
Luke Baker21 April 2026 11:23
Ronnie O’Sullivan is 50 and still a genius – but can he conquer snooker’s new Chinese dynasty to win historic eighth crown?
Even by Ronnie O’Sullivan’s absurd standards, this has been an astonishing season, achieving unfathomable feats including one break which left casual observers wondering how it is possible to score 153, six more than the “maximum” 147.
Even at the age of 50, O’Sullivan is still redefining what is possible on a twelve-by-six table.
O’Sullivan was winning major titles before the current world champion, Zhao Xintong, was born, yet he is still producing moments of unfettered genius.
He arrives at the Crucible chasing a historic eighth world title, which would stand him alone in rarified air, one clear of Stephen Hendry. Significantly, despite his long love-hate relationship with snooker, O’Sullivan has shown he is still motivated to break new ground.
Read Lawrence Ostlere’s full analysis of ‘The Rocket’s’ latest pursuit of history:
Luke Baker21 April 2026 11:10
How to watch Ronnie O’Sullivan play
Every session of every match at the 2026 World Snooker Championship will be live on the BBC, with BBC One, BBC Two, BBC Four, the BBC red button, BBC iPlayer and BBC Sport website all utilised for coverage across the 17 days.
The tournament is also broadcast on TNT Sports in the UK, with every session shown across their channels and subscribers can also use streaming service HBO Max to watch TNT Sports.
Luke Baker21 April 2026 10:59
When does Ronnie O’Sullivan play?
Ronnie O’Sullivan begins his Crucible campaign with a best-of-19, first-round encounter against Chinese debutant He Guoqiang.
The first session of their match, consisting of nine frames, is on Tuesday 21 April, starting at 2.30pm with the concluding session of the match exactly 24 hours later on Wednesday 22 April at 2.30pm.
If O’Sullivan gets through, then his second-round contest will be the best of 25 frames, across three sessions against John Higgins. The first session is on Saturday 25 April at 7pm, the second session is on Sunday 26 April at 7pm and the final, concluding session will be the following afternoon – Monday 27 April at 1pm.
Luke Baker21 April 2026 10:55
Ronnie O’Sullivan vs He Guoqiang
Good morning and welcome to The Independent’s coverage of Ronnie O’Sullivan vs He Guoqiang.
Snooker’s greatest player of all-time begins his quest to win a record eighth World Snooker Championship crown in front of what will surely be a raucous Crucible Theatre crowd.
Stick with us for all the action.
Luke Baker21 April 2026 10:46
Source:
www.independent.co.uk




