Guernsey Press

Ken Doherty urges snooker chiefs to keep World Championship at ‘sacred’ Crucible

The deal to play the tournament at the Sheffield venue expires in 2027.

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Ken Doherty has urged snooker chiefs to think twice about tearing the World Championship away from the Crucible after the venue’s current deal expires on its 50th anniversary in 2027.

Doherty, who won the tournament in 1997, challenged Barry Hearn live on the BBC earlier this week after the former World Snooker Tour chairman insisted finance would be the exclusive factor in determining its future.

And the Irishman doubled down on his criticism of Hearn, insisting that the memories generated at the famous venue, which has staged the tournament every year since 1977, matter more than the lure of Saudi Arabian or Chinese cash.

Snooker – Dafabet World Snooker Championships – Day Two – The Crucible
Ken Doherty insists the World Snooker Championship cannot be sold to the highest bidder (Anna Gowthorpe/PA)

“Barry has so many great memories himself of being here, when Steve (Davis) won his first title and you saw what it meant. An extra five or 10 million isn’t going to make any difference to Barry Hearn, but I think it would make a big difference to this Championship.”

World number one Ronnie O’Sullivan raised questions over the Crucible’s future in the build-up to this year’s tournament when he suggested the game’s authorities should pursue lucrative deals to stage it abroad.

Snooker – Dafabet World Snooker Championships – Day Seven – The Crucible
Ken Doherty reached three Crucible finals during his career (Anna Gowthorpe/PA)

Doherty, who has been widely praised for standing up to Hearn in the interview with presenter Hazel Irvine, concedes the venue does need modernising, but says accepting prospective offers from big-money backers in the Far East is not the answer.

“He (Hearn) was very forceful about the money side,” added Doherty. “It’s great what he’s done for snooker in such a short space of time – he’s given these players more tournaments and a lot of prize money.

“These other countries can create their own history, their own tournaments, but the Crucible is very special. It should be sacred and you can’t buy sacred things.

“I love Barry Hearn, and he’s done a magnificent job. Snooker has to get bigger and better, and Barry and Matchroom are the perfect people to do that. But I just say, please Barry, don’t sell the World Championship.”

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