National Snooker championship Asif, Bilal, Babar advance
KARACHI: The seeded trio of Muhammad Asif, Muhammad Bilal and Babar Masih outwitted their respective rivals confidently and gracefully but the wild card entrant Muhammad Majid Ali and unseeded Sultan Muhammad tested the patience of all concerned in the quarterfinals of the Jubilee Insurance 43rd National Snooker Championship 2018 here at the Karachi Gymkhana on Monday.
Majid and Sultan made a mockery of the sustained efforts of the Pakistan Billiards & Snooker Association (PBSA) to popularize the sport by engaging into a practice which was legitimate but against the spirit of the game. They were guilty of dragging their best of nine-frame encounter to more than six hours while Asif had wrapped up his quarter-final in a matter of 70 minutes.
With the semifinals and the final to be televised live on Geo Super, it could be a disaster of sorts if any of these three games is played at the same pace as the one between Majid and Sultan in the quarter-finals.
Both the best of 11-frame semifinals are due to take place on Tuesday. In the first semifinal, scheduled to start at 10 am, Bilal will be up against Babar and it will be followed by the semifinal between Asif and Majid. All the four quarter-finals began simultaneously at the designated time of 10 am on Monday. Second seed Asif, a former world champion, was the first to enter the semifinals as he needed just over an hour to topple Zulfiqar Abdul Qadir in straight frames with the scores of 125-0, 108-1, 72-24, 72-30, 73-49.
The 35-year-old Asif, hailing from Faisalabad, didn’t look back after starting with a bang. He began with a lightening quick break of 100 in the opening frame and followed it up with one of 90 in the very next frame. More breaks of 57 and 56 in successive frames didn’t allow his 31-year-old opponent from Karachi to get off the mark. Third seed Bilal, 32, had to bring all his expertise into play to down the 26-year-old from Sialkot, Muhammad Ahsan Javaid, 5-3 with the frame scores of 68-30, 54-70, 59-60, 99-1(99), 09-81, 64-41, 57-53, 64-0. Bilal, acclaimed as one of the best potters of the country, expressed his frustration rather loudly at missing his targets occasionally but he was at his best in the third frame while compiling in superb break of 99.
Eighth seed Babar, 31, was also required to play his top game to overpower his 19-year-old opponent from Gujranwala, Ali Haider. He also won the match 5-3 with the frame scores of 66-51, 69-21, 25-59, 8-66, 69-27, 61-32, 10-47, 70-17.
The battle between the 24-year-old Majid, belonging to Samundari, and the 37-year-old Sultan, a resident of Karachi, went to the full distance of nine frames with the former winning it finally 5-4 with the scores of 62-53, 32-108, 73-28, 60-0, 28-71, 54-61, 68-35, 20-79, 70-61. Both the cueists have had the reputation of slowing down the game but they seemed to have overdone it in their attempt for survival which was resented by those present on the occasion.
-
Meghan Markle, Prince Harry Likely To Attend Super Bowl Halftime Show 2026 -
AI Next Big Trial: Elon Musk Calls For ‘Galileo Test’ To Prove True Intelligence -
US Appeals Court Affirms Trump’s Immigration Detention Policy -
Bella Hadid, Adan Banuelos Rekindle Romance After Brief Separation -
Jay-Z Shares Bold Advice With Bad Bunny For NFL Super Bowl Halftime Show Appearance -
Epstein Probe: Bill, Hillary Clinton Call For Public Testimony Hearing -
Brooklyn Beckham Considers Adoption As Nicola Peltz Can't Carry A Baby -
Expert Discusses 'complications' Of Measles Outbreak -
Kaley Cuoco Recalls Her Divorce With Karl Cook: 'I Was Gonna Die' -
Celine Dion Reveals Music She's Listening To Lately -
HR Exec Kristin Cabot To Speak At Crisis PR Conference After Coldplay Incident -
Why Travis Kelce Says Taylor Swift Has Made Him 'so Much Better'? -
Halle Berry Credits This Hairstyle With Launching Her Acting Career -
Hailee Steinfeld Spills Her 'no-phone' Rule With Husband Josh Allen -
Bowen Yang Gets Honest About Post SNL Life: 'It’s An Adjustment' -
Charlize Theron Delivers Strong Message At 2026 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony