Ronnie O'Sullivan 'You Can't Argue With Perfection' Break Barrage vs Stephen Hendry 2008 WSC SF - Duration: 49:27. Rocket Ronnie 650,643 views. Double Kiss is the fast-paced, thrilling sequel to Framed, by snooker champion Ronnie O’Sullivan. Frankie James thought his troubles were behind him. When the goddaughter of London’s fiercest gangster, Tommy Riley, goes missing in Ibiza, Tommy knows there’s one man for the.
World snooker champion Ronnie O'Sullivan's frank and honest account of his astonishingly dramatic life. Running is my drug. To be honest, drugs (and alcohol) used to be my drug, but now I've got the healthiest addiction going.
Running is what has helped me fight my demons, win five world snooker championships, and cope with all the crap life's thrown at me. They say what doe World snooker champion Ronnie O'Sullivan's frank and honest account of his astonishingly dramatic life. Running is my drug.
To be honest, drugs (and alcohol) used to be my drug, but now I've got the healthiest addiction going. Running is what has helped me fight my demons, win five world snooker championships, and cope with all the crap life's thrown at me. They say what doesn't kill you makes you stronger, and in this book I look at everything that hasn't killed me, but has had a good go - my addictive personality, depression, my dad's murder conviction, the painful break-up with the mother of my children, the difficulty of balancing family life with that of a sportsman. Those are the downers. But it's also about the great things in my life - my kids, snooker, my dad's release from prison, great mates who have helped me, and the psychiatrist Dr Steve Peters who has taught me how not to run away from life when it gets tricky. For the first time, I explain some of my madder moments - why I walked out in the middle of a match against Stephen Hendry, why I sat with a wet cloth over my face in a match against Mark King. This is a book about what it takes to be a champion - the sacrifices you have to make, the obsessive practice, the selfishness.
Finally, it's a book about what it's like to get the buzz. And I hope anybody who's ever got the running buzz will relate to this. Ronnie O'Sullivan is one of those guys where I can appreciate he is a brilliant snooker player (and runner as it turns out) but his poor sportsmanship, unprofessionalism and blokey following hasn't really endeared me to him over the years. However, as I am something of a fellow running addict I thought I'd give this book a go to see if O'Sullivan could win me over if I got to know him better. In a nutshell he failed spectacularly. Gostinichnaya programma opera house.
The three major achievements in this book are it isn't remotely pr Ronnie O'Sullivan is one of those guys where I can appreciate he is a brilliant snooker player (and runner as it turns out) but his poor sportsmanship, unprofessionalism and blokey following hasn't really endeared me to him over the years. However, as I am something of a fellow running addict I thought I'd give this book a go to see if O'Sullivan could win me over if I got to know him better. In a nutshell he failed spectacularly. The three major achievements in this book are it isn't remotely pretentious in its delivery you really get a sense of O'Sullivan's character; he succeeds in getting across an essence of the running buzz and there is bravery on show here as he tackles the difficult subject of depression head on.