There has always been a churchlike silence around The Crucible. Part of its peculiar power is that. You can hear the kiss of one ball against another because there are two players, a green table, and a crowd that has been trained for decades to remain motionless. The silence didn’t simply end on Sunday afternoon when a woman vaulted the barrier in the third frame and began yelling about the television license. Like something tangible falling off a shelf, it appeared to collapse all at once.
At the table was Shaun Murphy. Wu Yize was seated in his chair. Before security could arrive, referee Rob Spencer, a former police officer, moved faster than anyone watching from home could have predicted, putting himself between the intruder and the baize.
In a matter of seconds, the woman—later identified as adult content creator Sasha Swan—was pinned to the barrier and taken out. She later admitted on social media that she had wanted to streak. She couldn’t quite pull it off. The BBC was the target of the protest, or more accurately, “who f—ing pays their TV licence anyway.” To be honest, it’s difficult to determine whether that’s a cogent political stance or just a brand exercise disguised as one.

The fact that this was the second incident in two days makes it more difficult to ignore. A man yelled, “never forget the Epstein files” during Wu Yize’s semifinal match against Mark Allen on Saturday. This was a reference to the documents that the US Department of Justice made public in February. One of the most elegant sporting events on the British calendar is the scene of two protests, two entirely unrelated grievances. The Crucible seems to have turned into a stage that anyone with enough willpower could take over for a brief moment on national television.
The response from the audience was instructive. After Swan was led out, they applauded after initially booing her. It was a very British and snooker-specific sequence of annoyance followed by relief. The spectators of this sport police themselves with a sense of weary pride. The sound of a crisp packet rustling, coughing at the wrong time, and ringing phones are all met with glares. Nevertheless, phones have been a persistent issue in Sheffield over the past two weeks. A phone rang in the second frame, and Murphy himself threw down his rest. From the ground, Spencer cautioned the throng: “Don’t be the person that has to be thrown out.” Before the night was out, someone unavoidably turned into that person twice.
It’s worth taking a moment to consider Wu Yize. At the end of the first day, the 22-year-old from Anhui province was leading the world final 10–7. The Crucible’s first-ever Chinese player in this role. Additionally, a woman yelling about a British broadcasting tax that he most likely does not pay interrupted his historic afternoon. That is almost ridiculous, but Wu, to his credit, hardly winced.
It’s difficult not to question whether the Crucible’s contract with its audience, which has been in place since 1977, is eroding as it plays out. The seriousness of the room was always part of what made snooker so appealing. In the past, disruptions were unimaginable. They’re happy now. In a matter of hours, Swan uploaded her video and included a caption that spreads more quickly than any World Snooker apology. In response, competitions such as the World Snooker Tour will probably implement longer bans and more stringent security measures, and they ought to. However, you can’t really control a culture where shouting and getting up during a televised event is now accepted as a way to get attention.
Tonight is the start of the final. Murphy will have to come up with something outstanding to retaliate. By Tuesday morning, the protest will likely be a footnote. However, something changed this past weekend at the Crucible, and it wasn’t just the score.

