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Neil Robertson reveals painful reason for Scottish Open withdrawal

2025 UK Championship - Day 7
Injury forced Neil Robertson out of the Scottish Open (Picture: Getty Images)

Neil Robertson has revealed that an ongoing injury issue saw him withdraw from this week’s Scottish Open in Edinburgh.

The world number three won this event back in 2017 and would have gone in as one of the favourites this week, having won the Saudi Arabia Masters this season and made the semi-finals of the recent UK Championship.

However, he was one of a quartet of withdrawals shortly before the tournament began, along with Mark Williams, Jak Jones and Robert Milkins.

World Snooker Tour did not confirm why the four players were not competing in Edinburgh but the Australian has now revealed that an injury has been hampering him for some time.

Robertson wrote on X: ‘I have strained my piriformis and injured my disc.

‘Been playing with discomfort for the last few comps. Making sure I’m right for the new year with treatment.’

The piriformis is a muscle in the buttock, with Piriformis Syndrome an issue which can be very painful if the muscle spasms, tightens or is strained.

Mark Williams will be back in action at the Masters in January (Picture: Getty Images)

Williams did not say why he is not playing in Edinburgh, posting on X: ‘No one needs to [know why] you have pulled out really, private.’

He did point out that it is rare for him to skip tournaments, adding: ‘You can count how many comps I pulled out of on two hands in 30 years.’

Players do not have to compete in every tournament on the tour, by any means, with a busy schedule over the season and it is understandable for Williams at 50 years old not to play in everything.

John Higgins is into the last 32 in Edinburgh (Picture: Getty Images)

Another 50-year-old is in Edinburgh, though, with John Higgins getting his campaign underway with a 4-2 win over Poland’s Antoni Kowalski.

The four-time world champion took some time to get going in the match but made a high break of 104 to book his spot in the second round where he takes on Noppon Saengkham on Wednesday.

The Wizard of Wishaw played down his performance, talking up the 21-year-old’s safety game, which impressed against the famously tough match player.

‘Very lucky to win. Antoni was outplaying me in the safety department and tying me up in knots,’ he told WST. ‘I think I fluked about four or five crucial balls during that game. That was the reason I probably won.

‘Really nice, great to have the support [at his home event]. I’m just disappointed I couldn’t play well to make them come out on a Monday afternoon. Listen, we’ll see what happens in the next match. I’ll need to play better than that.’

There was disappointment for another local hope as Stephen Maguire was beaten 4-2 by Chang Bingyu late on Monday night.

Chang recovered from 2-1 behind, with breaks of 102 and 55 in the final two frames helping him to victory.

Teenager Lan Yuhao has caught the eye early this season (Picture: Getty Images)

Arguably the shock of the day came earlier in the day as two-time Scottish Open champion Gary Wilson was beaten 4-1 by 17-year-old Chinese talent Lan Yuhao.

The teenager has been impressive in his first season as a professional and that is one of his finest wins, knocking in breaks of 51, 112 and 60 on his way to victory.

He already won two qualifying matches to reach the main stage in Edinburgh and takes on Wu Yize in the next round.

Scottish Open results and schedule

Monday December 15

10am

Lei Peifan 4-3 Amir Sarkhosh

Zhang Anda 4-1 Fan Zhengyi

1pm

Yuan Sijun vs Ben Woollaston

Wu Yize 4-0 Ian Burns

Gary Wilson 1-4 Lan Yuhao

John Higgins 4-2 Antoni Kowalski

3pm

Stuart Bingham 4-2 Artemijs Zizins

Shaun Murphy 4-3 Liu Hongyu

Noppon Saengkham 4-3 Liam Pullen

Shaun Murphy has made a strong start in Scotland (Picture: Getty Images)

7pm

Matt Selt 4-2 Ryan Day

Si Jiahui 4-3 Mark Davis

Joe O’Connor 4-3 Stan Moody

9pm

Stephen Maguire 4-2 Chang Bingyu

Tuesday December 16

10am

Ali Carter 2-4 Zak Surety

Xiao Guodong 4-3 Michael Holt

1pm

Tom Ford vs Anthony McGill

Hossein Vafaei vs David Grace

Zhou Yuelong vs Sam Craigie

Mark Selby won the UK Championship earlier this month (Picture: Getty Images)

3pm

Elliot Slessor v Steven Hallworth

Mark Selby v Robbie McGuigan

Pang Junxu v Robbie Williams

Barry Hawkins v Jiang Jun

7pm

Jack Lisowski v Wang Yuchen

Jackson Page v Thepchaiya Un-Nooh

David Gilbert v Ashley Hugill

Kyren Wilson v Gao Yang

Not before 8pm

Mark Allen v Ishpreet Singh Chadha

Chris Wakelin v Oliver Lines

Wednesday December 17

Round Two

Lei Peifan vs Yuan Sijun

Wakelin/Lines vs Ford/McGill

Stuart Bingham vs Shaun Murphy

Zhou/Craigie vs Xiao/Holt

Ben Mertens vs Page/Un-Nooh

Hawkins/Jiang vs Gilbert/Hugill

Wu Yize vs Lan Yuhao

Matt Selt vs He Guoqiang

K Wilson/Gao vs Pang/R Williams

Si Jiahui vs Chang Bingyu

Vafaei/Grace vs Selby/McGuigan

Noppon Saengkham vs John Higgins

Allen/Chadha vs Lisowski/Wang

Zhang Anda vs Matthew Stevens

Slessor/Hallworth vs Zak Surety

Joe O’Connor vs Zhao Xintong

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