Wednesday 16 January 2013

Masters 2013: Last 16 Stevens v Williams


Matthew Stevens (Wal) 4-6 Mark Williams (Wal)
61-51, 70-61 (Williams 52), 81-15 (55), 42-70 (55), 74-16 (67), 61-63 (Stevens 59), 6-70 (59), 48-72, 1-81 (68), 1-92
Mark Williams staged a remarkable comeback to beat fellow Welshman Matthew Stevens 6-4 and reach the quarter-finals of the Masters.
The world number seven, a two-time winner of the title, trailed 3-0 and 4-1 in an error-strewn contest.
Stevens, who wasted chances to go 4-0 and 5-1 up, gifted a struggling Williams two frames and the left-hander reeled off five in a row.
Williams will play Mark Selby or Stuart Bingham in the last eight on Friday.
Those two play the last of the first-round matches on Wednesday at 19:00 GMT.
Williams, who won the Masters in 1998 and 2003, and Stevens - the champion in 2000 - both started nervously as they missed a series of chances in a scrappy opening frame lasting half an hour, before Stevens potted the final black.
Williams was first in with a break of 52 in the second but missed the last red and Stevens, ranked 15 in the world, cleared to the black to make it 2-0.
A run of 55 in the next extended his advantage before a crucial missed brown in the fourth allowed Williams to sneak the last frame before the interval.
A 67 break on the resumption saw Stevens move 4-1 clear but another incredible missed brown - "unforgiveable" said seven-time world champion Stephen Hendry, commentating on the match - handed Williams a lifeline.
The 37-year-old took the frame on the black to get back to 4-2 and a run of 59 in the next reduced the deficit to one after another bad Stevens miss on the blue.
Williams was still prone to errors himself but took another tight frame on the colours to draw level, and a break of 68 in the ninth confirmed the sea-change in fortunes, before he wrapped up victory in some comfort in the next.
"I didn't play very well at all and neither did Matthew," said Williams. "He missed a sitter of a brown for 5-1 and I don't think I would have come back from that to be honest. But I was still trying and that is what got me through.
"It is easy to win when you're playing well but I was getting hammered out there and should really have been 4-0 and 5-1 down. I am over the moon I managed to stick in there and turn it around somehow."



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