A BAD kick and missed chances were to blame according to John Higgins after he lost a dramatic final-frame decider in the first round of the Dafabet Masters 6-5 to Mark Allen.

The two-time winner of this tournament suffered his twelfth first round Dafabet Masters exit in 23 appearances despite a spirited display at Alexandra Palace.

It was the Wizard of Wishaw’s third defeat at this stage of the competition to Allen and his second first round exit in the past three years – a run of results he admitted still stings.

“They (losses) don’t get any easier. I seem to have had a lot of them in my career,” he said.

“I don’t know if you could tell . . . I thought I got a kick on that black. When I was playing it into the reds it bounced, but who knows. It was a bad miss and a miss that cost me the game.

“I had a good chance at the start but missed a bad red. I have no complaints. I missed the clutch balls at the end and when you do that you don’t win. It’s that simple.”

A 111 break in the second frame had given Higgins a 2-0 lead before Allen fought back to go into the mid-session interval all square.

And it was 4-4 when a dramatic clearance from Higgins, including five reds and five blacks, saw the black ball re-spotted with the scores tied at 67 apiece.

And while it was the man from Antrim who was successful on the black to claim a 5-4 lead, the Scotsman wasn’t finished yet.

The experienced 41-year-old kept his composure to make a 77 break, his second highest of the match, in the tenth frame for a second decider in the first three matches at this year’s Masters.

At the conclusion of that break, the four-time World Champion lifted his hand to his ear, copying Allen’s effort to gee up the crowd, as the match headed into its final frame.

“When Mark won the frame he wanted to hear the roar of the crowd and then I just copied it I suppose when I made it five each,” he added.

“But there was nothing wrong with the crowd. It was a great atmosphere.”

Higgins’ defeat means that there will be no Scottish player in the quarter-finals of the Masters for the first time since 1988.

“It’s not great is it? Not great,” Higgins concluded.

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