According to the details made available, Shahzad and Toba, who lost their opening-day matches, outclassed their opponents to stay alive in the event. Pakistan’s top-ranked player Shahzad was the first to win, beating South Korea’s Byoung Hwa Ro 4-0.
The Lahore cueist, who narrowly lost to a Polish opponent earlier, relied less on luck this time and was aggressive right from the start. Making his intentions clear, Shahzad took the first frame 72-2 and then hit a 52-point break in the second frame to win it 105-15. He improved on that in the third, with a break of 73, to win it 98-7 before sealing the victory by taking the fourth frame 74-25.
Meanwhile, Toba, who lost against an Afghan opponent, also looked better than the opening day as he thrashed Heinz Beggel of Germany 4-0. Toba opened with a 72-2 win and took the next three frames 110-1, 68-15 and 61-58 to register the win.
However, it was the Pakistani-turned-Afghan cueist Saleh Mohammad who stole the limelight on the second day with a superb 141-point break as he trounced Russia’s Vladimir Bykov. The veteran cueist struck the break in the second frame of the match as he won 49-29, 141-0, 66-34 and 105-14.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 30th, 2011.
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