Masters 2024: Ronnie O'Sullivan fights back to beat Ali Carter 10-7 for eighth title

Media caption,

Masters 2024: Ronnie O'Sullivan fights back to beat Ali Carter 10-7 for eighth title

Mr Q Masters

Venue: Alexandra Palace, London Dates: 7-14 January

Coverage: Watch live on BBC TV, BBC iPlayer, BBC Red Button and online; live text coverage of the final on Sunday 14 January.

Ronnie O'Sullivan fought back to claim a record-extending eighth Masters title with a thrilling 10-7 victory over Ali Carter at a raucous Alexandra Palace.

O'Sullivan, already the youngest-ever winner of the tournament, becomes the oldest-ever champion too, aged 48.

He trailed 6-3 in the evening session but then reeled off seven of the next eight frames to seal his win.

O'Sullivan's victory means he earns the £250,000 top prize, with Carter taking home £100,000.

The world number one, who collected his eighth UK Championship in December, had never previously won consecutive Triple Crown events in the same season.

However, he now has the opportunity to emulate Steve Davis, Stephen Hendry and Mark Williams, who are the only players to have won all three - UK Championship, Masters and World Championship - in the same campaign, with Scotland's Hendry achieving the feat twice.

"I don't know how I won this tournament. I've just dug deep, tried to play with a bit of freedom tonight and just tried to keep Ali honest," O'Sullivan told BBC Sport.

"If he was to win, he would've had to scrape me off the table. I just wanted to see if he had it at the end and could he get over the line, that was my mindset coming into the evening.

"Ali didn't play great this evening, he played better this afternoon and he let me off the hook tonight. He didn't take on some balls I thought he would and that gave me belief. I just tried to take the most from it."

O'Sullivan goes through the gears as Carter stumbles

World number 10 Carter, a 2020 finalist, had talked of relishing the opportunity to face the man who beat him in both of their meetings in world finals in 2008 and 2012.

And initially he was able to back that up, compiling breaks of 106 and 122 as he opened up a 5-3 lead on Sunday afternoon.

He then made the perfect start as play got under way in the evening, with a fine cut on a long red to the top left corner pocket helping him to extend his advantage.

A refocused O'Sullivan, who was guilty of playing several over-adventurous shots earlier on, responded with two half centuries as he won the next three frames to level the match at 6-6 going into the interval.

Having seen his three-frame lead evaporate in just 37 minutes, Carter delivered a magnificent riposte with a difficult red to the right middle laying the platform for a record ninth century break of the tournament, surpassing the mark set by O'Sullivan in 2007 and 2009, with a wonderful 127.

But 40-time ranking event winner O'Sullivan took a nervy 14th frame and the pivotal 15th frame after Carter agonisingly failed to execute a superb attempted cannon on two reds and then missed a pink into the left middle.

A break of 89 put 'The Rocket' on the brink of victory and he converted that as a clearly deflated Carter missed the chance to prolong the match beyond the 17th frame.

"Obviously I'm gutted I lost. It's the final, it's all about winning. Before I rocked up here I would've taken the final but I've got good things to come for me and I'm heading in the right direction," said Carter.

"Ronnie played very well, he missed a few at the end and the crowd got excited. When you play Ronnie, you have to play the crowd, you have to accept it. I did my best but it just wasn't good enough."

Related topics

Related internet links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.