Snooker champ Bingham confident of avoiding world title curse

Reigning champion Stuart Bingham, pictured in 2015 after winning last year's World Championship Snooker final, suffered the "curse of the Crucible" this year in a first-round defeat

Stuart Bingham insists he isn't intimidated by the 'Crucible curse' as the defending champion prepares to start his bid to retain the World Championship title. Since the tournament moved to the Crucible in Sheffield in 1977, no first-time winner has returned 12 months later to recapture the title. England's Bingham, who defeated Shaun Murphy in a gripping 2015 final, is confident he can avoid that fate and sees no reason why he can't leave the famous venue as a two-time champion. "It's an honour to have the 'Crucible curse' tagged on me this year," Bingham said. "A lot of people haven't experienced what I've had in the last year, so to have that chance to break the curse is going to be great. "Nobody's ever done it though so the odds are stacked against me. I'm looking forward now to Saturday and kicking it all off." Bingham, 39, faces a daunting opener against two-time losing finalist Ali Carter, who battled through three qualifying rounds to reach the main draw. One of Bingham's main rivals for the title will be five-time world champion Ronnie O'Sullivan, who is bidding to win the tournament for the first time since 2013. O'Sullivan is expecting great things from Judd Trump, another leading contender for the title. But he warned the 26-year-old it's time to show his class on the big stage because the pressure will only increase if Trump, who was runner-up to John Higgins in 2011, misses out this year. "He's 26 and he's at the prime age now to push on," O'Sullivan said. "If he's going to make it happen he's got to make it happen in the next two or three years. "Once you go into your thirties and you haven't won the world title, and then there's a new batch of young players coming through from China, from here, there and everywhere, you can start to think that 'maybe I might not' - and the pressure gets more and more." While O'Sullivan begins his first round tie against David Gilbert on Sunday, Trump must wait until Wednesday to tackle Liang Wenbo, the Chinese player who beat him at the UK Championship in December. World number five Trump won the China Open at the start of April, just as he did before his run to his first Crucible final. He was a semi-finalist at the World Championship last year, losing to Bingham, and his desire to take the title is immense. "I've got enough experience now," Trump said. "There's no reason anymore why I shouldn't be winning here. "I'm not too young, it's not come too early now, so there's no more excuses. I've had my five or 10 years of growing up. "I'm still young but I've got a lot of experience that people my age shouldn't really have so I need to use that now."