...At Earl's age, a race to 100 may be pushing Earl's limits more than Shane's.
Good point, PoolSharkAllen. :wink:
I am reminded of what Wade Crane said about making the transformation from action games to tournament play. As a road man, he had no fear of being 8 or 9 games stuck in an ahead set, but in tournament play of short races, you had to come out of the gate fast to snatch that almighty win.
In a long race to 100, Earl doesn't have to like it. In fact, *recent* history dictates that Earl doesn't do so well coming from behind. He does shine, however, when he's leader of the pack by a long shot.
That said, though, if they're playing for that 10 dimes, well, I guess everybody wants to get their money's worth.
These long races may be appealing to some, but another school of thought is that some folks don't have time to devote to sweating a 3-day match. Of course, if this match isn't for the sweaters and is more for bragging rights and pocketing this big chunk of change, then I guess that's the way to go for the participants and stakehorses.
As far as the 5-by-10, unless it's a gaff table, I just don't get how it can favor either player. After this set, maybe they can entertain the thought of engaging in a set of long-rail banks on a snooker table for 3 days. :grin-square: