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John Higgins defeats Judd Trump in a thriller at the World Snooker Championship

John Higgins of Scotland celebrates after winning his first round match against Thepchaiya Un-Nooh of Thailand during day five of the World Snooker Championship at Crucible Theatre on April 25, 2018 in Sheffield, England
Image: John Higgins beat Judd Trump in a thriller to reach the semi-finals in Sheffield

John Higgins moved a step closer to claiming a fifth World Championship title after edging out Judd Trump in a thriller at the Crucible.

The 42-year-old Scot triumphed 13-12 to book a semi-final clash with Kyren Wilson, who had earlier demolished Mark Allen 13-6.

The other last-four tie will see Barry Hawkins challenge Mark Williams. Hawkins surprised third seed Ding Junhui 13-5 while Williams saw off Ali Carter 13-8.

Higgins was 5-3 down heading into Wednesday's action and after a topsy-turvy tussle Trump made it 11-9. However, a 134 helped Higgins take control and he would clinch the deciding frame.

John Higgins looks dejected during the Semi-Final match between Mark Allen and John Higgins on Day Seven of The Dafabet Masters at Alexandra Palace on January 20, 2018 in London, England.

Higgins, who last won the top prize in 2011, told the BBC: "What probably made my win, it was I enjoyed it. It must be heartbreaking for [Trump] but for me to come out winning is a brilliant feeling.

"I don't know what it is but we seem to play classics all the time. He was the better player in the match and I was hanging on to his coat tails. He must hate the sight of me."

Wilson, who had lost in the quarter-finals in each of the last two years, said of his conquest of Allen: "I definitely wouldn't say it was the biggest win of my career, it's up there. It was always a goal of mine to reach the one-table set-up and I just can't wait to get out there and experience it.

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"You have to sometimes seize on your opponent when you sense a little bit of weakness and I could feel that Mark was maybe struggling a little bit towards the end of last night, so every little mistake that he made I felt like I punished it and played really well."

England's Barry Hawkins plays a shot in his quarter final against Scotland's Stephen Maguire during the World Snooker Championship at the Crucible theatre in Sheffield, northern England,
Image: Barry Hawkins crushed third seed Ding Junhui

In his match, Hawkins swiftly won the two frames he needed against a woefully out-of-sorts Ding, finishing the surprisingly one-sided contest in style with a break of 117.

Hawkins said: "I'm in the semis but there's still such a long way to go and there's still some great players in.

"I'm obviously over the moon to get through and I thought I played pretty well. I felt like he gave up at the end there."

Watch the Mosconi Cup in 2018 when it returns to London's iconic Alexandra Palace, live on Sky Sports from December 4-7. Can Team Europe make it nine in a row?

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