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Ronnie O'Sullivan says only a select few can be considered great

"The reason why Tiger Woods and Usain Bolt produce such fantastic performances is that they raise their level because of the pressure"

Ronnie O'Sullivan celebrates after winning against Tom Ford during the Betway UK Snooker Championship Semi Final at the York Barbican on December 08, 2018 in York, England
Image: Ronnie O'Sullivan says sport's true greats should never be written off

Ronnie O'Sullivan says Tiger Woods' recent Masters triumph is proof that sport's true greats should never be written off.

Woods ended his major title drought of over a decade with victory at the Masters in Augusta last week, while O'Sullivan returns to the Crucible as a strong favourite to clinch his first world crown since 2013.

But O'Sullivan faces a tough task if he is to equal the six career world titles won by Steve Davis and Ray Reardon and move within one of the all-time record of seven held by Stephen Hendry.

At the age of 43 and having regained the world No 1 ranking earlier this season, O'Sullivan, who will start against amateur qualifier James Cahill on Monday, is bullish about his chances of adding to his trophy haul.

There's probably just five or six sports people on the planet who you should never really write off.
Is Ronnie one of those people?

He said: "I think if you don't feel pressure you're probably not going to perform well. The reason why Tiger Woods and Usain Bolt produce such fantastic performances is that they raise their level because of the pressure.

"It is great to watch true greatness. There's a lot of people around sport who get spoken of in great terms but they are not actually great - they are just very, very good.

Tiger Woods celebrates after winning the Masters
Image: Tiger Woods celebrates after winning the Masters

"There's probably just five or six sports people on the planet who you should never really write off.

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"Sport's not just about the ability to do it, it's about the courage and the mentality and the confidence to stamp the authority on the game and make other people not play to their full potential."

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