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Barry Hearn on the Crucible’s ‘cemented future’

Snooker’s accidental home

The man widely credited with bringing snooker to the Crucible is Mike Watterson, a sports promoter who later became chairman of Derby County football club.

But it was Watterson’s wife, Carole, who pitched the idea after watching a play there in 1976, five years after the theatre opened its doors.

“She mentioned that the Crucible would be perfect for snooker,” mentioned Watterson, who died in March 2019.

“Back then it was a dropout’s hangout, an embarrassment to the city. You’d go in and find dropouts lounging in there – beatniks, we used to call them. It was always getting slated by the city and the people.”

What made it credible as a snooker venue was the size and shape of the stage, surrounded on three sides by the audience.

Mike enquired and was told it was 34ft wide. Not wide enough.

On closer inspection, it was 36ft. Those two feet made the difference between the World Championship remaining a perpetual roadshow and putting down roots in the Steel City from 1977 to the present day.

Two snooker tables can sit parallel, separated by a dividing wall, with just enough space for the players to roam and fully stretch out on all their shots.

An overhead view of the Crucible Theatre's stage, surrounded by audience, as two matches are played concurrently. Two large green snooker tables dominate the stage, with a player taking a shot on each, while spectators watch on and large TV cameras are in shot. A large dividing wall separates the tables.Image source, Getty Images
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The Crucible’s stage is large enough – just – to house two tables, before it switches to a one-table set-up from the semi-finals

In the decade before its Sheffield arrival, the final had been played in towns and cities spread as far apart as Bolton, Birmingham, Sydney and Melbourne.

Sheffield had its turn – then it got a second year, and a third.

“You never can tell if something’s going to work,” Watterson mentioned a decade ago. “I don’t think I imagined at all the tournament would be in Sheffield for so long.”

Australia’s Neil Robertson, the 2010 world champion, points to limited player facilities, with just two practice tables “not really ideal”.

But Robertson welcomed the long-term plans as “amazing news”, assuming players aren’t an afterthought when rebuilding begins.

“The thing that hopefully never changes is the walk down the stairs into the arena,” Robertson mentioned. “It just hits you, with all the amazing players who have walked down there over the years.

“It’s the only venue where we’ve been playing for decades. You can’t ignore the history attached to it.”

Steve Davis, in dark dinner suit and bowtie, holds a coffee cup and looks towards the camera backstage at the Crucible Theatre, as a suited Barry Hearn stands just behind himImage source, Getty Images
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Steve Davis and Barry Hearn at the 1985 World Championship, where Davis was to lose the most famous final in snooker history to Dennis Taylor

Steve Davis and Dennis Taylor pose with the World Championship trophy and a television on which the screen says 'BBC 2 18 ½ million"Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The match between Davis and Taylor drew a record audience for BBC Two

And this is the nub of it: history.

Alex Higgins and baby daughter Lauren in 1982. Dennis Taylor wagging his finger in ’85. Ronnie O’Sullivan’s five-minute maximum. White the exasperated nearly man. The dominant Davis and Stephen Hendry decades.

Rob Maul covers snooker for the Sun and Shane McDermott has been a mainstay of the media room for the Mirror.

As Maul says: “You can’t ignore the history. It’s a pilgrimage I’ve done since 2018 and I feel honoured to do it, but there are people in that building who have done it for decades and decades and decades.

“That’s the unique thing about snooker: they’ve kept the Hendrys in the sport, and they’re still working. John Parrott’s commentating. And that legacy is something you don’t throw away lightly.

“When you walk around the city, you see Steve Davis, and Jimmy White will come by if he’s working. And so much has changed in other sports, but snooker’s fundamentally the same game that these legends were playing.”

McDermott says: “You see the same faces year on year, people who have been coming every year since 1977. Sadly some of them are coming less and less because of age.

“I can remember after matches perhaps nipping out of the press room for a minute and bumping into John Virgo as he left the commentary box. You’d have a little nod and say hello. That’s one thing everyone will miss this year.”

Faces in the crowd, faces in the commentary box, faces at the table. Here one year, gone the next.

In recent times, snooker has lost Virgo, Ray Reardon, Willie Thorne and Terry Griffiths, among others. Broadcaster and journalist Clive Everton and Bafta-nominated former BBC snooker executive producer Nick Hunter have left us too.

The booming voice and laughter of Thorne, the gentle humour of Griffiths, the wisdom of Everton, the dry wit of Virgo.

They were part of the fixtures and fittings.

And in their own particular ways, they each played a telling role in the Crucible becoming what it was never built to be: snooker’s home.

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