World Snooker Championship ; Five-Time Champion and World No 1 Beaten by an Amateur .

Amateur
James Cahill pulled off the biggest shock in Crucible history as he completed
an astonishing 10-8 first-round win over five-time champion Ronnie O'Sullivan.
O'Sullivan
trailed 5-4 overnight and the increasingly rattled world number one slipped 8-5
behind, missing countless simple chances against the 23-year-old qualifier.
A
jaded-looking O'Sullivan then somehow found some form, scoring breaks of 104
and 89 to level.
But Cahill,
who does not even have a world ranking, showed remarkable composure under
pressure to get over the line.
"I
could barely stand up at the end," the Blackpool potter told BBC Sport.
"I am not really sure what to say.
"I
scored a good pressure 70 to go 6-5 up and after that I felt like he was the
one under pressure. He didn't want to lose to me.
"I have
always believed in myself and that I can beat anyone on my day. I want to show
what I can do now."
O'Sullivan
was set to go 9-8 ahead but missed a relatively simple final pink to allow
Cahill, the first-ever amateur to make it through to the Crucible, the chance
to clear up.
And he made
sure of his place in round two, when he will face Scotland's Stephen Maguire,
with a fine clearance of 53 in the final frame.
Cahill lost
his professional status in 2017, but has won back his two-year tour card from
next season after a strong year playing as a top-up player on tour.
He has now
backed up his impressive first-session performance in the pressure-filled arena
against a man considered the greatest player of all time.
The other
match in Wednesday's morning session saw 2015 world champion Stuart Bingham
open up a commanding 8-1 lead over 2006 winner Graeme Dott.
Pre-tournament
O'Sullivan had talked about the need to win this year's event if he is to stand
a chance of equalling Stephen Hendry's seven world titles.
But he
appeared to rush against Cahill, taking an average of about 15 seconds per
shot, and was often too casual - telling BBC Sport afterwards that his
"limbs felt heavy" and he "had no energy".
"I felt
horrendous. I was struggling to stay awake," said the 43-year-old.
"I
haven't felt great for a few weeks and I have not slept brilliantly the past
couple of nights.
"You
have to come here physically and mentally well. If you are not 100% it will
make it harder. I tried to hang in there and get through and have a few days
off.
"He did
well. He held himself together. It's been a very successful season for me, but
it wasn't meant to be."
Defeat means
the 36-time ranking event winner has not reached the World Championship
quarter-finals since 2014, while this is the fourth time he has lost in the
first round at snooker's showpiece event in his 27 visits.
What a
fantastic performance by James Cahill. The way he cleared those balls up under
significant pressure - because they were there to be taken - sometimes that
makes it an even harder job.
Knowing what
was probably going through his mind about how big a deal it would be, to still
hold himself together to pot that last red, and then clear what was a normal
set of colours under that pressure, absolutely fantastic and he must be
absolutely delighted.
This is
probably the biggest (shock).
The fact
James Cahill is still an amateur, the first amateur to ever play at the
Crucible, beat probably the greatest player that's ever played this game and
looked so calm.
He played
with a smile on his face, didn't look like he was nervous and looked like he
was loving every minute of it.
FROM .bbc.com/sport/snooker
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