Judd Trump beats Kyren Wilson in Masters final frame thriller
Defending champion Judd Trump held his nerve to produce a match-winning break of 65 to beat Kyren Wilson 6-5 and secure a quarter-final place in the Masters.
Trump stormed back from a 3-0 deficit to reel off five frames in a row and put himself on the brink of victory before a costly miss in the penultimate frame handed his opponent the initiative.
Wilson looked set to wrap up victory himself when he got in first in the decider but he left a red dangling over the middle pocket on a break of 51 and two-time winner Trump coolly stepped up to book his place in the last eight.
Trump told Eurosport: “It was a bit of a scrappy game and it was nip and tuck the whole way through.
“I felt like I threw it away at 5-4. Kyren made an amazing break to go 5-5 and it looked like he would get over the line but he just left that little gap and I took it quite well.”
Breaks of 65 and 76, as well as a superb clearance of 34 to the pink after Trump’s 58 in frame three, helped Wilson race into a 3-0 lead.
Contributions of 42 and 52 saw Trump finally get on the scoreboard before the mid-session interval and the former world champion then got back on level terms with breaks of 101 and 83.
Trump won the seventh frame to edge in front for the first time and also took the next, a scrappy affair which lasted 40 minutes, to lead 5-3, only for Wilson to edge a tense ninth frame to keep the match alive.
Wilson drew level after a brave long red sparked a frame-winning clearance of 58, but he could not repeat the feat when it mattered enabling Trump to sink the final black to get over the line.
In the evening match, Barry Hawkins set up a quarter-final clash with seven-time champion Ronnie O’Sullivan by avenging defeat to Neil Robertson in the 2022 final with a 6-3 victory.
The pair shared the opening two frames before Hawkins began to get the better of a series of lengthy safety battles to nudge into a 4-1 lead.
However, Australian Robertson, fresh from a festive trip back home in a bid to recharge for the remainder of the campaign, proved he was up for the fight with back-to-back breaks of 117 and 110 to reduce the deficit to a single frame.
Two-time Masters finalist Hawkins edged one frame away from victory with a knock of 69.
He missed a golden chance early in the next when he ran out of position after potting the opening red but recovered to progress to a showdown with O’Sullivan, who beat him 10-1 in the 2016 final.
“I haven’t beaten Neil in a long time so to beat him here is really pleasing,” Hawkins said.
“We all know he’s been struggling for a bit of form so coming into this match there’s always a bit of pressure because he’s not done anything all season.
“You can see he was not full of confidence but he showed signs of coming back at me there and it was nice to finish off the match.”