Ronnie O'Sullivan made light work of John Higgins with a stunning performance in the quarter-finals of the Riyadh Season World Masters, claiming a 4-0 victory in the early hours.
Higgins failed to pot a ball in the match which saw O'Sullivan make three century breaks, without opting to pursue the £395,000 (€462,000) prize for a 167.
The Rocket opened with a 135, before a 129 followed and then 102.
He broke down on the way to a century in the final frame, settling for 83 in a completely dominant showing.
The game last just over an hour with O'Sullivan looking focused and motivated compared to his previous appearance at the Championship League.
There was final-frame drama as Mark Allen completed a remarkable come-from-behind victory over Mark Selby.
Allen took the decider by doubling the black as he came back from 3-1 down, with Selby appearing to cruise through the opening frames.
With a two-frame cushion, Selby had taken a 54-point lead in the fifth, but a miss allowed Allen to step up with a clearance of 65. And it was a similar story in the sixth as a missed black allowed Allen to come from behind to level it.
A tense deciding frame was full of mistakes and fouls as Allen again came from behind, helped by a fluke green before his stunning winning shot.
"I actually thought the white was going to drop in," he said on Eurosport. "It was such an easy shot to flick off the black, but I thought, 'No, I'm going for it'. As long as I got a really good white, I'd be alright."
Ali Carter cut a frustrated figure after losing his quarter-final 4-1 to world champion Luca Brecel.
Carter had looked on course to level the match at 2-2 but his night unravelled after a late missed brown which he blamed on a scoreboard mistake.
"I'm clearing up, I want to get on with it and the scorer's got the score wrong," he said. "I've stunned up the table, thinking I can play anything I want.
"I look at the scoreboard and now all of a sudden I'm thinking, 'Have I miscalculated?' and it's just completely put me out of my rhythm.
"I thought I've got to pot the brown to be able to draw. I don't know how it worked out but I'm looking at the blue and all of a sudden the ref said I'm on 41 and I'm 22 behind or something. It just completely threw me."
Carter was also unhappy with the four-hour wait for his match to start after Selby and Allen went long.
Judd Trump came from behind to beat an unlucky Shaun Murphy 4-3. Murphy had opened up with breaks of 126 and 105 to storm into a 2-0 lead but Trump came through a tricky third frame before levelling it with a break of 75 in the fourth.
Murphy nosed back in front and appeared to be heading for the final four as he took a big lead in the sixth frame, only to clip a red and allow Trump a way back in - one that he duly took with break of 69 before he bossed the final frame.
Trump will play O'Sullivan while Allen meets Brecel in the other semi-final.