In the final he beat tournament surprise Mark Selby 18-13. Selby was down by 12-4 after the first day but managed to make it an exciting contest by improving to 12-10.
To reach the final Higgins had to beat Michael Holt (England), Fergal O'Brien (Ireland), Ronnie O'Sullivan (England) and Stephen Maguire (Scotland)
This was the second world trophy for Higgins. He also won the championship in 1998. In total he's won 18 ranking events.
Allister Carter (England) had the highest break of the event with 144. In total there were 68 centuries which ties the tournament record.
With this win Higgins moves to the top of the new world rankings. Fellow Scot Graeme Dott is in second and Shaun Murphy from England is No. 3.
Selby's runner-up position takes him into top 16 for the first time, at No. 11. Ding Junhui from China and Welshman Ryan Day are also newcomers in that elite group. Junhui comes in at No. 9 and Day is at No. 16. Englands's super veteran Steve Davis has reached his goal of being in the top 16 at age 50. He will start the new season at No. 15. In August he reaches the "half century".
See also:
- 888.Com World Snooker Championship (WSA)
- Higgins beats brave Selby in epic final (BBC)
- World Championship (Eurosport)
- 2007 888.com World Championship (Global Snooker Centre)
- 888.Com World Championship (Sporting Life)
- World Snooker Championship 2007 (Wikipedia)
- nooker Ranking with Cuefacts from the World Snooker Championship Final (cuefactor.com)
- Late-night drama at the Crucible (BBC: Sport Editors' Blog)
- Higgins wins World Snooker Championship (Sport Happens)
- SnookerManager: World Championship 2007
- John Higgins (Wikipedia)
Related posts:
- Dott is new world snooker champion (2006)
- Williams wins in China
- Ding Junhui wins Northern Ireland Trophy
- Neil Robertson wins Grand Prix
- Peter Ebdon wins UK Championship
- Ronnie O'Sullivan wins Masters in style
- Shaun Murphy claims Malta trophy
- Neil Robertson wins Welsh Open
- Graeme Dott claims China Open trophy
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