Ronnie O Sullivan Sporting Legends Slot by Playtech

Ronnie O Sullivan Sporting Legends Slot by Playtech  Introduction

Ronnie O’Sullivan – Sporting Legends is a jackpot slot game by Playtech that has five reels and 25 paylines. The game offers several bonus features, including a Pick Me feature where players can win in just five rounds, and the 147 Maximum Break Free Games feature that gives players 12 free spins with a 1x multiplier on each spin.

The game is part of a series, which means there are daily, weekly, and mega jackpots up for grabs.

Ronnie O Sullivan Sporting Legends Bonus Features

If the logo appears on both reels 1 and 5 simultaneously, it will trigger the Championship Bonus feature. This feature presents you with a set of snooker balls, and you must choose one of them. If you pick correctly, the amount you’ve won will be displayed, and you can progress to the next stage of the tournament, represented by Ronnie in five different poses, symbolizing a different stage of the competition.

You can keep picking and progressing through the rounds of the Championship until you either win or reveal a “Collect” ball, which will end the feature. However, there are more “Collect” balls than win balls in the final round, making it harder to win.

Any significant win results in a cascade of gold coins, adding to the enjoyment. Click “Continue” to go back to the main game. Scatters award bonuses in addition to the line win, and they can appear anywhere on the reels, allowing you to win multiple scatter bonuses in one game.

Conclusion

Ronnie O’Sullivan – Sporting Legends is a feature-packed jackpot slot game by Playtech that offers several bonus features and the chance to win daily, weekly, and mega jackpots. The game is based on snooker legend Ronnie O’Sullivan and offers players the chance to become legendary stars while earning some extra riches.

Gareth Edwards

Gareth Edwards  Sir Gareth Edwards, knighted in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List in 2015 for services to sport and charity, was arguably the greatest scrum-half in the history of rugby union. Born on July 12, 1947, in the former mining village of Gwaun-Cae-Gurwen, near Ammanford, in South West Wales, Edwards made his international debut, at the age of 19, in a Five Nations Championship match against France at the Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir, near Paris in 1967. The following season, at the age of 20, he became the youngest ever captain of the Welsh national team, against Scotland at Cardiff Arms Park in the same competition.

All told, as arguably the best player in a back division that included John Peter Rhys ‘JPR’ Williams, Gerald Davies, Phil Bennett and Barry John, Edwards would win 53 consecutive caps for Wales. Remarkably, for a scrum-half, he scored twenty tries for Wales in Test matches. He also won ten caps for the British Lions, notably in New Zealand in 1971, when they lost only one game and won a Test series against New Zealand and South Africa in 1974, when they were undefeated for the entire tour.

Edwards also scored what has been described as the ‘greatest try ever’ when playing for the Barbarians against New Zealand at Cardiff Arms Park in January, 1973. In the first few minutes of the match, Barbarians’ fly-half Phil Bennett retrieved a kick from New Zealand winger Bryan Williams inside his own 22-metre line, sidestepped three opponents and passed to full-back JPR Williams. Twenty-five seconds later, Edwards capped a sensational handling move by diving over in the corner, leading commentator Cliff Morgan to exclaim, ‘A dramatic start! What a score!’

The Best Moments of Sporting Legends

Ian Botham

Knighted in 2007 for services to charity and cricket, Sir Ian Botham is widely regarded as one of the finest all-rounders in the history of cricket. Born in Oldfield, Cheshire on November 24, 1955, Botham made his first-class debut for Somerset against Lancashire in the County Championship in May, 1974, at the age of 18. He made his Test debut for England in the third Test against Australia at Trent Bridge, Nottingham in July, 1977 and just over two years and 21 matches later, on August 30, 1979, became the fastest player to score 1,000 runs and take 100 wickets in Test cricket.

A right-handed batsman and right-arm fast medium bowler, ‘Beefy’, as Botham was popularly known, scored an aggregate of 5,200 runs in Test cricket, at an average of 33.55, and took 383 wickets, at an average of 28.40. He achieved his highest Test score, 208, against India at the Kensington Oval, London on July 8, 1982 and his best bowling figures in a single innings, 8/34, against Pakistan at Lord’s, London on June 15, 1978.

However, Botham will always be best remembered for three match-winning performances, two with the bat and one with the ball, in the Ashes series in 1981, subsequently dubbed ‘Botham’s Ashes’. After losing the first Test at Trent Bridge and being out for a pair in the drawn second Test at Lord’s, Botham resigned the England captaincy and was replaced by his predecessor, Mike Brearley, who had been tempted out of retirement.

At Headingley, England followed on and were quoted at 500/1, at one point, to win the third Test. However, Botham produced a remarkable display of hitting, scoring an unbeaten 149, off just 148 deliveries, towards at second innings total of 356, setting Australia a total of 130 to win. In an inspired spell, England fast bowler Bob Willis produced figures of 8/43 in the second innings, reducing Australia to 111 all out, and the home team scored the unlikeliest of victories. In the fourth Test at Edgbaston, Botham took five wickets for one run in 28 balls, to put England 2-1 ahead in the six-match series, scored 118 in the second innings of the fifth Test at Old Trafford, which England also won, and took ten wickets in the drawn sixth Test at the Kensington Oval.