With a 6-1 victory over Wu Yize, Neil Robertson advanced to the finals of the York UK Championship.
Wu of China had already broken the opening frame with a score of 62, but as the Australians came in, things largely went one-way.
Robertson, 43, who has previously won the UK title three times, drew breaks of 51, 65, 75, and 68 as he reeled off the next five frames.
Robertson came from 48 points back to take the seventh frame after Wu, who won the International Championship last month, had no response.
Pang Junxu, who defeated Mark Williams 6-3, will now face Robertson.
Pang, who had only met the Welshman in his previous meeting before losing 6-1, received a standing ovation after completing his victory with a superb break of 116.
The 25-year-old Chinese won the next three frames after the players traded the opening two frames.
Williams, who had two centuries, unintentionally knocked in a red while potting the pink to give his opponent the lead in the subsequent frame, and was then punished for missing a long red in the ninth frame.
“I played pretty poorly,” I said. I either play well or I’m terrible, Williams said. That’s how it is now.
tighter pockets “keeping everyone honest”
Robertson has appeared revived in recent years despite initially falling to 28th in the world in 2023 and 2024 after a terrible run of form.
He is currently at the top of the snooker one-year list for prize money, having previously won the lucrative Saudi Arabia Masters earlier this year, and he is now third overall in the world rankings.
Robertson claims that tighter pockets have fostered a fairer test and are more in line with his first ten years as a professional despite the complaints of several players regarding table conditions.
Robertson said on BBC Two, “I believe there have been much more events with much bigger pockets over the past ten years.”
You have a group of players who are great even in those pockets and a group who aren’t great in those pockets, according to the statement. Many of the mistakes I saw in my first ten years as a professional have now come to mind.
There are too many matches where three or four people go through the same level of quality, you wonder.
They maintain honesty among everyone. Many professionals will be relaxing at home and saying, “Thanks Neil for speaking up.” Players have been discussing this issue in the video game, especially in China, where players are reporting inflated results.
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