Shaun Murphy hits top form to end Zhao Xintong’s Crucible title defence | World Snooker Championship

Shaun Murphy stormed into the World Snooker Championship semi-finals as the defending champion, Zhao Xintong, became the 21st player to fall victim to the so-called “Crucible curse”.

Murphy’s 13-10 triumph means that Zhao joins the list of first-time winners who have failed to return the following year and successfully defend their crown.

Murphy won four of the first five frames of the final session to turn an 8-8 overnight deadlock into a 12-9 lead. Zhao clawed one frame back to keep his hopes alive, but the 43-year-old sealed victory with a break of 69.

“I knew going into it that nothing but my best would do, and thankfully I found it in the third session,” said Murphy, the 2005 champion, who has increasingly found his form since squeaking out a 10-9 first-round win over Fan Zhengyi.

“It’s one of the best wins of my career and I’m delighted to win it and get to the semi-finals. I’ve been churning out performances like this week in, week out, and it’s been a real test of determination and perseverance, but I’ve managed to stay the course.”

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“Shaun played really well, he gave me big pressure and played perfect snooker today,” Zhao told BBC Sport. “He deserved to win. “I felt some pressure [as defending champion] but I still felt alright. I tried to get better, but Shaun is a good player and he played very well so congratulations to him.”

Mark Allen seized on an “unforgivable” blunder by his opponent Barry Hawkins to book his place in the last four for the second time in four years.

Allen looked set to be hauled into a nerve-shredding decider after Hawkins fluked a red and was faced with a simple tap up behind the pink to leave his opponent in all sorts of trouble. But Hawkins came up short with the cue ball, ultimately gifting Allen the chance to clear up and win the match 13-11.

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Mark Allen celebrates after reaching the Crucible semi-finals for the third time in his career. Photograph: Godfrey Pitt/Action Plus/Shutterstock

“I wouldn’t have fancied going 12-12,” admitted Allen. “My heart sank a little bit when he fluked that red out of the snooker and that summed up the match for me. I played 24 frames and I don’t think I had to say sorry once.”

Hawkins, the 2013 runner-up, held the upper hand for most of the contest, with Allen required to haul back 7-4 and 8-6 deficits, but increasingly faltered on the big shots in the final session, leading to the dramatic conclusion.

“It’s unforgivable not reaching it,” admitted Hawkins. “I was worried about over-hitting it, believe it or not … What a way to lose. It’s a horrible feeling, knowing that you played an absolutely terrible shot. It’s just gutting, a sinking feeling, after such a long match and playing well for the most part.”

Allen first reached the semi-finals as a fresh-faced 23-year-old in 2009, when he almost retrieved a 13-3 deficit against John Higgins, eventually losing 17-13 but prompting Higgins to describe his opponent as a “street fighter”.

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“I think I have always had that,” Allen said after Wednesday’s win. “I think it’s just being from Northern Ireland, we’re all the same in all sports, we have a never-say-die attitude. I still haven’t been anywhere near my best but I’m in the semi-final. Ninety-five per cent of the tour would snap your hand off for that.

“Every year I come here thinking I can win it, and it’s no different this year. The first hurdle is getting through that first round, and the next one is ‘can you get to the one-table set-up’. Then you want to give yourself a chance [in the final] on Sunday or Monday. I haven’t done that yet and that’s the next step for me.”

Neil Robertson leads John Higgins 9-7 and Wu Yize has chiselled out a 10-6 advantage over Hossein Vafaei, with both remaining quarter-finals set to conclude on Wednesday evening.

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