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Ronnie O'Sullivan returns to defend Masters title

The Editorial Team

Published 10/12/2014 at 13:11 GMT

After his incredible victory in Sunday's UK Championship final, Ronnie O'Sullivan is now looking ahead to the defence of his Masters title next month.

Ronnie O’Sullivan

Image credit: Getty Images

The Rocket beat Judd Trump 10-9 in one of snooker's all-time classic matches to win his fifth UK title and 15th Triple Crown event in all. He also made a stunning 147 maximum break during the tournament in York.
And fans will have another chance to see O'Sullivan at Alexandra Palace in London next month, with snooker's most prestigious invitation event running from January 11 to 18.
O'Sullivan plays his first match on Tuesday January 13th at 1pm against Ricky Walden. Last year he met Walden in the quarter-finals and scored a record 556 unanswered points, before going on to beat Mark Selby 10-4 in the final to take the trophy and £200,000 top prize.
O'Sullivan revealed that the challenge of snooker's next generation of players has forced him to adapt. "I've had to reinvent my game in many ways to compete in the new era of snooker," said the 39-year-old. "I felt that I wasn't a powerful enough player. I had to change my technique in order to allow me to play certain shots which the modern player can. I watched what they do and how they do it, and realised I need to learn from them.
"Players like Judd Trump, Mark Selby, Neil Robertson and Ding Junhui, once they get confidence they can dominate the table. They play a very attacking and very aggressive game. I can see Judd being the leading player in years to come, although the others are very tough competitors.
"I don't want to stop now because I'm enjoying it, but I don't want another match like that final against Judd because it took a lot out of me. It has been a fantastic calendar year for me and a great start to this season. I can't wait for the Masters now."
The schedule for the first round is:
Mark Selby v Shaun Murphy (Sunday January 11 at 1pm)
Stuart Bingham v Marco Fu (Sunday January 11 at 7pm)
Judd Trump v Stephen Maguire (Monday January 12 at 1pm)
Neil Robertson v Robert Milkins (Monday January 12 at 7pm)
Ronnie O'Sullivan v Ricky Walden (Tuesday January 13 at 1pm)
Barry Hawkins v Ali Carter (Tuesday January 13 at 7pm)
Mark Allen v John Higgins (Wednesday January 14 at 1pm)
Ding Junhui v Joe Perry (Wednesday January 14 at 7pm)
Format for subsequent rounds:
Quarter-final one (O'Sullivan / Walden v Bingham / Fu): Thursday January 15 at 1pm
Quarter-final two (Hawkins / Carter v Robertson / Milkins): Thursday January 15 at 7pm
Quarter-final three (Ding / Perry v Allen / Higgins): Friday January 16 at 1pm
Quarter-final four (Trump / Maguire v Selby / Murphy): Friday January 16 at 7pm
Semi-final one: Saturday January 17 at 1pm
Semi-final two: Saturday January 17 at 7pm
Final: Sunday January 18
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