‘It can’t get any worse’ – Mark Williams to make major change in snooker tournament for first time amid health issue

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MARK WILLIAMS will try contact lenses in a tournament for the first time after admitting he struggles to play snooker because he is “HALF BLIND”.

After losing in this month’s Players Championship, the Welsh star, 50, revealed that “every single shot seems blurry” because his “eyes have gone”.

Mark Williams of Wales during a snooker quarter-final.
Mark Williams will try contact lenses in the Tour Championship for the first time
Mark Williams of Wales playing snooker.
Williams admitted he struggles to play snooker because he is ‘half blind’

And next Monday evening – when he begins his quest to defend the Tour Championship in Manchester – he will opt for the special measure.

Williams, who faces Ding Junhui in round one of the penultimate event of this season, said: “I’m just taking it a few days at a time.

“I’m going to stick with these contacts now for the Tour Championship.

“I don’t know how they’re going to react with the lights. I’m hoping they won’t be too much of a problem.

“If I’m playing okay with them then I’ll keep them in for the World Championship and see where I go after there.

“The contacts are helping out at the minute. They hurt when they’re in but I might just get used to them.

“It can’t get any worse than the Players because I couldn’t see much.”

Willo told SunSport last month that he was lucky not to be blinded in one eye after a golf ball struck by his son flew backwards and hit him in the face in a freak accident.

If Williams retains the £150,000 Tour Champ, which has a field of 12 players, he would become the oldest-ever ranking event winner in the sport’s professional era.

This would beat the record of Ray Reardon who was 50 years and 14 days when he won the 1982 Professional Players Championship.

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The World No5 won the Champion of Champions in Bolton last November while his other final appearance was a loss to Judd Trump in a 10-9 thriller at the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters in September.

The three-time world champion said: “When I get on a run I’m dangerous.

“Even when I lost to Judd Trump in the final in Saudi, it was a great match and I was one red away from winning.

“It’s definitely in there, but unfortunately it just doesn’t come out as often as it used to.”

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