For weeks, the whispers circled the snooker world: where is Ronnie O’Sullivan? The game’s biggest star, the figure who transcends the sport, had skipped yet another lucrative tournament—this time a £100,000 invitational that many players would have given anything to attend. Fans wondered if his absence was simply another episode in his selective scheduling, or if something deeper was at play.
The answer came not in words at first, but in images. O’Sullivan, at 49, posted a workout video to social media, a glimpse into the private regime that keeps him sharp both physically and mentally. In it, the “Rocket” looked focused, deliberate, and in control, as if addressing the speculation without saying a word. For a man whose career has been built as much on psychology as potting balls, the video felt like a carefully timed statement: he’s still preparing, still locked in, still prioritising his own balance over anyone else’s expectations.

Then came the words—cryptic but definitive. O’Sullivan confirmed the date of his next competitive appearance, telling fans exactly when he plans to step back under the lights. That moment of clarity was greeted with relief across the sport. Even those who criticise his frequent withdrawals recognise the truth: snooker without O’Sullivan doesn’t feel the same. Audiences flock, broadcasters lean on his presence, and rivals raise their own levels when the Rocket is in the draw.
His decision to skip the £100k tournament once again shows his evolving relationship with the game. At this stage of his career, O’Sullivan has little interest in money or ranking points—he has more of both than anyone could realistically need. What drives him now is control: control over his body, his mind, and his calendar. That makes his workout clips especially telling. They are not vanity projects but signals that his health and fitness are the foundation of everything he still wants to achieve.
“So important to me,” he wrote alongside the video, a phrase that could be interpreted in several ways. Important because fitness sustains his longevity. Important because routine brings calm. Or important because, without it, the mental discipline required to thrive in snooker’s most pressurised moments would be impossible to summon.
Critics may argue that he owes more to the sport, that fans deserve his presence at every major event. But O’Sullivan has never played by those rules. His greatness lies partly in his refusal to conform, to be consumed by the tour’s relentless churn. Instead, he has carved out a career on his own terms, choosing carefully when to appear—and usually, when he does, the show is unforgettable.
As his next competitive date looms, anticipation grows. O’Sullivan’s absence only makes his returns more dramatic, more must-watch. And with each workout video, each glimpse behind the curtain, he reminds us that what truly matters is not the prize money or the politics of participation. What matters is that Ronnie O’Sullivan remains ready, dangerous, and still capable of brilliance whenever he chooses to step back into the arena.