How ‘dropout’s hangout’ became snooker’s ultimate stageImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Ronnie O’Sullivan won his first World Championship title in 2001, after finding the Crucible a tough nut to crack in the early years of his careerByJohn SkilbeckBBC Sport senior journalistPublished24 minutes agoDown go the lights inside Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre, an overhead galaxy replaced by darkness.Heavyweight auditorium doors thud closed. A handshake between the protagonists disguises hell-bent hunger to degrade each other as far as non-contact sport allows.The world beyond this claustrophobic den of tension and turmoil becomes irrelevant. Phones are switched off, senses flick to high alert.New energy fills the air: anxious, anticipative. Crowd commotion hits a heavy metal high and drops steeply to silence.All that matters in this moment is one of life’s most edifying trivialities: snooker.The gunshot clack that follows is resin on resin, the cue ball rippling off the pack of reds, signalling the start of a stage show without a script.Rinse and repeat for 17 days. The marathon of the mind has begun.Never take a result for granted at the Crucible; high stakes can discombobulate the very best.”It has its own fingerprint as a snooker venue,” says six-time world champion Steve Davis.”I’ve had moments in there when it’s been the most wonderful place. There were other times when I wanted the whole place to swallow me up because it was the worst place ever.”Davis was humbled 10-1 on day one by Tony Knowles in 1982, his first year as defending champion. He was turned white as a sheet by Dennis Taylor in the 1985 black-ball final, then turned over by a Yorkshireman when Bradford’s Joe Johnson triumphed a year later.Fortunately for him, Davis also has rip-roaring memories of triumph at the theatre that this year is staging the World Snooker Championship for a 50th time.Most don’t.Twenty-four men have lifted the trophy in Sheffield; hundreds have left empty-handed.The Crucible and all that it entails chews up players, scars them. All the greats have been through the wringer. But what is it that makes the 980-seat venue so special?How did a venue once considered a “dropout’s hangout” become snooker’s ultimate stage?Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre has staged snooker’s World Championship since 1977″It’s the history, the quirkiness, the layout of the arena, how close the spectators are. It’s everything,” says Crucible MC Rob Walker, a coiled spring each April.”In 2018, Mark Williams shared a packet of Minstrels with somebody in the front row; he didn’t have to outstretch his arm, that’s how close they are.”The players tell you there’s nowhere harder to win. That arena doesn’t look very big, but I can assure you that when there is a bum on every seat and the whole place is silent, and you are the one about to play – or in my case, speak – it’s huge.”Intimidating?”It can be,” says Walker. “You unequivocally feel it more there than anywhere else. It does strange things to you, that arena.”‘Unthinkable’ it should move anywhere else”Over my dead body,” mentioned Barry Hearn, then the chairman of World Snooker, amid suspicions some years ago that under his leadership the tournament might leave Sheffield.Hearn, usually a money-making obsessive, has emotional ties to the Crucible stretching back decades.He bounded across the theatre floor in 1981 to hug new champion Davis, who he managed. The next year, fuelled by that success, Hearn launched the promotions company that would become Matchroom, whose newest accounts showed annual turnover of £225m.Hearn has forensic knowledge of the monetary value of sport. The possibility snooker could have made a quick killing by taking its premier event abroad, perhaps to China or Saudi Arabia, was clear. Hearn knew it, Sheffield knew it, the government knew it. All parties also knew what they could lose with such a move.A deal with Sheffield took years to execute.With bargaining chips galore, Hearn – no longer formally in charge but still a huge influence on snooker – hailed a people-pleasing agreement in March, when not only was a contract signed to keep the World Championship in Sheffield until 2045, but crucially a 500-seat expansion of the theatre was promised.
“The Crucible’s going to become even more famous and we haven’t lost our history, which is so important,” Hearn mentioned. “My life changed in 1981 when Steve Davis won the World Championship. It’s unthinkable for us to play the World Championship anywhere else than this great venue.”
Sheffield’s economy is boosted by £4.5m each year by the event, with a media value – exposure through free publicity – worth over £3m on top. No wonder Sheffield City Council pays the World Snooker Tour a hefty staging fee, and not the other way round.
Many leading Chinese players live in Sheffield, while a string of top-tier academies have opened up. This is not simply a 17-day snooker city.





