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Ronnie O'Sullivan to 'wait and see' on eighth world title tilt - 'I don't know if age is catching up with me'

Rob Hemingway

Updated 21/12/2022 at 23:06 GMT

Ronnie O'Sullivan will be chasing history - a record eighth world championship title - if he plays at the Crucible next year, but the 47-year-old said that winning it will be far from a formality. O'Sullivan was speaking at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year awards, where he was nominated for the overall individual award.

Top 10 shots from Ronnie O'Sullivan in 2022

Ronnie O'Sullivan says he will have to "wait and see" about a tilt at an eighth World Championship title, saying that it will depend upon "timing and form".
O'Sullivan landed his seventh world title earlier this year, equalling Stephen Hendry's record in snooker's blue-riband event.
But talking at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award - where he was one of the nominees for the overall individual award - O'Sullivan said going for an eighth is not a formality, especially given his age of 47.
"When I first turned pro I was happy with one [world title]," O'Sullivan told host Gary Lineker.
"That was my dream, to win one World Championship. I always remember that and I never try to get greedy. Anything after one, two, three or even four you just kind of go 'well each one is a bonus'.
"If I was to get an eighth that would be fantastic but it's really tough these days. There are a lot of good young players coming through, there's a lot of good talent and I don't know if age is catching up with me.
"We have to wait and see. I think a lot of it is a bit of luck, timing.
"I don't know if I'm going to go for an eighth but I'll have a good idea come a week before [worlds venue] the Crucible whether I'm in good enough shape to do it. If I am then it's on, but it's just all about timing and my form has to be good.
"If it's good then I've got a chance."
O'Sullivan was asked about his memorable, lengthy embrace with finalist Judd Trump after his latest Crucible win, and admitted it was to do with the effort required to have won the tournament.
The Rocket said: "In many ways at my age I was just more tired the last two world championships I won - 2020 and 2022 - I just felt so much more tired getting over the line when just physically I didn't feel like I had it in me.
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Ronnie O'Sullivan of England hugs Judd Trump of England after their final match on day 17 of the Betfred World Snooker Championships 2022 at Crucible Theatre on May 2, 2022 in Sheffield, England.

Image credit: Getty Images

"You've got nothing left to give whereas when I won it in 2012, 2013 I felt like I could go again for another 17 days.
"The enormity hits you a bit more when you think physically I just don't know how I did it. Before I felt quite comfortable. All of those feelings hit me at once."
O'Sullivan, though not there in person, was among sporting royalty at the BBC event, and opened up on how he has been able to perform for so long at the top level, especially in the worlds.
"I feel it's a combination," he said. "The top players rise to the biggest occasion and the ones who feel the pressure a bit more don't perform as well at the Crucible.
"The Crucible is a venue like no other. The pressure that it provides can make you or break you and that's why you get a lot of the same type of winners: Me, Hendry, [Steve] Davis, [Mark] Selby, [John] Higgins, [Mark] Williams, because we perform a lot better under the pressure than the other guys, so I think it's a mixture of both really."
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