Professional snooker player Ronnie O’Sullivan has never been shy about ripping up convention. But even by his own standards, switching between two cues, as he demonstrated at the World Snooker Championship, has added a new layer of intrigue to his Crucible campaign. At 50, chasing an unprecedented eighth world title, he has arrived in Sheffield with a decision that is equal parts gamble, nostalgia and necessity.
Roll of the Dice
The story begins, as O’Sullivan tells it, under a bed in Ireland. That’s where the old cue was unused for most of the year, until he pulled it out in the days before the tournament. After beating He Guoqiang 10–2 in the opening round, he admitted in an interview with Sky Sports that the move was a “roll of the dice” and that he was “a bit nervous because I thought you could look a bit silly.”
It was a response to a problem that has stalked him for months. O’Sullivan’s relationship with his equipment has been turbulent — the tips, ferrules, especially the feel, he has spoken openly ‘gone wrong’ moments. He even withdrew from the Masters last January after snapping a cue, later saying he “lost the plot.”
So when he says his main cue was “hopeless” during the first session, the switch makes sense. The old cue offered something familiar, allowing O’Sullivan, in his own words, to “play the shots that I like.” Once he settled, the performance followed, two centuries, a 35‑minute sprint to the finish line, and a place in the last 16.
O’Sullivan: Between dominance and detachment
He is still capable of brilliance, still capable, even, of winning this tournament. Yet he is also honest about the uncertainty that surrounds him.
I haven’t played enough top players regularly to know […] I’m still a bit rusty, we’ll have to wait and see.
O’Sullivan is both the greatest snooker champion and the sport’s most reluctant participant — alternating between dominance and detachment. He talks about enjoying the game again, about not wanting to be “a slave to the game,” and about doing “little stints now.” The two‑cue experiment fits that ethos. Instinctive, slightly chaotic, but rooted in experience not theory.
It also arrives at a moment when the Crucible is being reshaped by youth. O’Sullivan joked that the practice room feels like “a crèche,” full of 22‑ and 23‑year‑olds. He singled out Stan Moody and Liam Pullen as future world champions, praising their cue actions and composure. “It does make you feel a little bit out of place,” he said. “Why am I still here?”
Here he is, still winning
His next opponent, John Higgins, is a reminder of the era he belongs to. Another member of the famed Class of ’92, another 50‑year‑old still operating at the sharp end. Their meetings at the Crucible have shaped entire tournaments: in five of their last six clashes here, the winner has gone on to lift the trophy.
O’Sullivan calls them “a couple of oldies,” but the stakes remain enormous. Higgins has played more consistently over the past three years; O’Sullivan admits he may even be the underdog. But that is precisely why the two‑cue subplot matters. It is a window into O’Sullivan’s mindset, restless, searching, willing to gamble for the feeling he trusts more than anything, the sensation of getting through the ball cleanly.
Whether the experiment lasts another match or another week is anyone’s guess. But at the Crucible, where O’Sullivan has built his legend on instinct and audacity, it feels entirely on brand. Even now, even at 50, he is still finding new ways to keep the sport, and himself, on the edge.
Featured image via the Canary












