If you have “The Hustler And The Champ” by R.A. Dyer, turn to page 101 and start reading. If you don’t have it, it’s worth getting.
The 1941 World Championship Tournament was a true test of superiority in which 8 of the world’s top players played each other in a 32x round robin over the course of five months in New York, Newark, Philadelphia, Boston, Scranton and Syracuse.
Final won/loss records were as follows:
Mosconi 176/48
Ponzi 144/80
Caras 125/99
Procita 117/107
Lauri 109/115
Rudolph 99/125
Kelly 85/139
Irish 41/183
Smashing all other opponents in such a lengthy tournament was certainly impressive, but it doesn’t help us to understand how good Mosconi was at the time. To get a more subjective idea and to try and compare his performance to those of modern day players I’d look to his statistics for the tournament.
Mosconi ran hundreds like crazy in a performance that pool historian Charles Ursitti describes as equal to Dimaggio’s 56 game hitting streak (which occurred the same year!) and Bob Beamon’s 29 foot long jump in 1968.
Over the course of his 224 games, “Willie ran 125, 126 or 127 and out EVERY ELEVENTH GAME”.
There’s honestly no way to make a direct or fair comparison between players from straight pool’s golden era to players of today because the equipment is quite a bit different (easier today with better balls, faster cloth, etc) and because straight pool was all Mosconi, et. al. played, whereas today’s players split their time between 9 ball, 10 ball, straight pool, one pocket, etc. Giving Thorsten, Oliver, John and others the old equipment and a year or so to get used to it; they’d easily be able to compete against the historical greats of the game. Just as giving Mosconi, Ponzi or Greenleaf a Simonis-covered Diamond or Gold Crown and a set of Aramith Super Pro balls and they’d adapt just as easily. We have living proof that the transition from old equipment to new wouldn’t be that difficult in the form of Sigel, Varner, Rempe, ec. Players who played on the 80/20 felt and excelled, and then continued to excel and compete at world class level after Simonis became the standard cloth. I do believe, however, that Mosconi would be in a league of his own even today because he was so damned consistent. He rarely had bad days or bad tournaments. Just my opinion.
Ron F
I saw an interview with Jimmy Moore where he was asked whether Mosconi could have excelled at 9 ball or one pocket. He said absolutely, he had so much talent that he could have played any game. He didn't pull any punches about what he thought about various players but it was obvious he had great respect for Mosconi's game.