Thu. Dec 5th, 2024
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Judd Trump claimed his second UK Championship title with a hard-fought 10-8 victory over Barry Hawkins at the Barbican in York.

Only Ronnie O’Sullivan, Stephen Hendry and John Higgins have won more than the 35-year-old’s tally of 30 ranking titles although, given his current dominance, the expectation on him now will be to add to his haul in the Triple Crown events.

He is currently joint-eighth on the all-time list with Alex Higgins in fifth position.

However, he had to endure a stirring fightback from Hawkins, who fought back from 9-6 to 9-8 and almost got the two snookers he required in a dramatic 18th frame to force a decider before Trump prevailed.

“It was such a hard game. The way Barry battled today considering what happened yesterday was incredible really,” Trump told BBC Sport.

“He made it so hard. He had a chance to go level and the game could have changed. I was not enjoying myself in the seat at 9-8. I just wanted it to be over with.

“Every shot I was snookered and I was thinking, ‘this could be the worst loss of all time’. It is pure relief.”

World number one Trump, who had collected his only previous UK crown in 2011, led 5-3 going into Sunday evening’s concluding session.

He knocked in two half-century breaks to retain his two-frame advantage at 7-5 going into the mid-session interval.

Hawkins, 45, searching for his first Triple Crown title 28 years after turning professional, took the next and looked well-placed to level the match at 7-7 before running out of position, allowing his opponent to pull clear again.

Trump compiled a sublime break of 133 – his highest of the tournament – as he opened up a 9-6 lead but a gutsy response saw Hawkins enjoy runs of 75 and 82 before his resistance was finally broken as he narrowly missed out on a deciding frame.

With Trump securing the £250,000 top prize it means he has now tasted success at the two most lucrative ranking events on the Tour this term – having also triumphed at the Saudi Arabia Masters – to cement his status at the top of the world rankings.

Hawkins, who earned £100,000 as runner-up, had been bidding to become the oldest first-time winner of a Triple Crown event.

However, just pushing Trump close was quite a feat, given the 45-year-old began Sunday’s final barely 12 hours after concluding his semi-final win over Mark Allen in the early hours.

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