The one guy who has been mentioned in this forum from time to time that has to rate up there with the "best" of the rogues is "Low Down Dirty, Stinkin' Red". I never got a chance to meet this scoundrel and I am the lesser for it. The stories told about this cunning rascal always made me smile.
I may have his name slightly askew but those that knew him will surely give Red his due. Right now, I am smiling thinking about Red, standing on a makeshift ladder, looking through the top window at the pool game taking place in which he had made a wager; waiting at a distance and discreet vantage point to see the outcome of the game in case he needed to make a quick exit to avoid having to pay.
JoeyA
I'll tell you about Red in a moment but first let me thank Grady for his terrific story about Jr. Weldon. We always called him Junior back then. He was a legendary gambler, much like Jack Cooney. He snuck around pretty good and not a lot of guys knew who he was. I know he ran with Ronnie quite a bit also. That's a pretty strong pair to draw to!
I knew Bakersfield Bobby real well since he grew up in Bakersfield and I had the big pool room there in the 70's. Bobby moved back and forth between the San Joaquin Valley in California and Arizona (Eloy is right). He was a foreman for the crop picking teams. Bobby actually worked picking crops when he was a teenager and was strong as an ox. He could fight too if he had to. Bobby and Peter Gunn (Lin Wesson) were both from Bakersfield and they grew up playing against each other as teens. Peter Gunn was another legendary bar table champion, although he once dusted Tacoma Whitey for 60K back around 1970. A monster score back then. Peter was built like a Fullback, 6' tall and solid as a rock. No one ever messed with him.
Both these guys played great bar pool, on a par with Junior. Of course they all knew each other! I was good friends with Eddie Bellmore too. He was around Hollywood the same time I was. He was a very friendly guy and liked to play pool, even though he wasn't any good. I couldn't believe it when I saw him walk in on crutches. He had been paralyzed from the waist down. This big rugged guy was now a cripple but he never complained.
More to come.
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