Kyren Wilson is the new world champion of snooker.
Jak Jones was defeated 18-14 at The Crucible as the World Snooker Championship crowned Wilson for the first time.
Jones had scraped away at an early 7-1 deficit but lost out in a dramatic black ball climax to the final frame of the day which let 12th seed Wilson off the hook and heading into Monday's concluding session with an 11-6 lead.
Despite Welsh qualifier Jones winning the first frames of the second day to make a fight of the final, errors crept into his game and Wilson made use of a commanding lead to seal the trophy.
World Snooker Championship 2024 schedule
Final
Kyren Wilson 18-14 Jak Jones
Semi-finals
David Gilbert 11-17 Kyren Wilson
Jak Jones 17-12 Stuart Bingham
Quarter-finals
Kyren Wilson 13-8 John Higgins
Stuart Bingham 13-10 Ronnie O'Sullivan
David Gilbert 13-8 Stephen Maguire
Judd Trump 9-13 Jak Jones
Second round
David Gilbert 13-4 Robert Milkins
Jak Jones 13-9 Si Jiahui
Stephen Maguire 13-9 Shaun Murphy
Judd Trump 13-7 Tom Ford
Joe O’Connor 6-13 Kyren Wilson
Ryan Day 7-13 Ronnie O'Sullivan
John Higgins 13-12 Mark Allen
Jack Lisowski 11-13 Stuart Bingham
First round
Zhang Anda 4-10 Jak Jones
Luca Brecel 9-10 David Gilbert
Judd Trump 10-5 Hossein Vafaei
Ali Carter 7-10 Stephen Maguire
Tom Ford 10-6 Ricky Walden
Shaun Murphy 10-5 Lyu Haotian
Mark Selby 6-10 Joe O'Connor
Gary Wilson 5-10 Stuart Bingham
Robert Milkins 10-9 Pang Junxu
Kyren Wilson 10-1 Dominic Dale
Mark Williams 9-10 Si Jiahui
Ding Junhui 9-10 Jack Lisowski
Mark Allen 10-6 Robbie Williams
Ronnie O'Sullivan 10-1 Jackson Page
John Higgins 10-6 Jamie Jones
Barry Hawkins 8-10 Ryan Day
World Snooker Championship 2024 prize money
The total prize pot this year is worth more than £2.3million, with the winner set to pocket £500,000 of that overall fund.
The runner-up will take home £200,000, while the players beaten in the semi-finals will still claim £100,000.
Quarter-finalists get £50,000, while those knocked out in the second round receive £30,000. First-round losers still take home £20,000, while there is a £15,000 reward for the highest break.
An extra bonus will see any player who manages to make two maximum 147 breaks across two of this season’s Triple Crown events - the World Championship, Masters and UK Championship - get a cool £147,000.