Breaking News --- 14.1 record

Tennesseejoe

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
Springfield, Ohio March, 19, 1954. Today Willie Mosconi started a straight pool run that will not end until tomorrow morning after making 526 consecutive balls. It is predicted that this record will stand the test of time.:p
 
Wow, that is going to be hard to beat.

But seriously, this news is going to be responsible for starting a million posts
on AZ.
 
Springfield, Ohio March, 19, 1954. Today Willie Mosconi started a straight pool run that will not end until tomorrow morning after making 526 consecutive balls. It is predicted that this record will stand the test of time.:p

Man, I can't believe his luck.....
..he gets as lucky as Efren.
 
Springfield, Ohio March, 19, 1954. Today Willie Mosconi started a straight pool run that will not end until tomorrow morning after making 526 consecutive balls. It is predicted that this record will stand the test of time.:p

Thanks for the info.
I fell asleep during the stream, and have been wondering for quite a while how that turned out.
 
Luckier, it would seem. Even Efren has never run 526 in 14.1! :D On topic though, this has been said many times before. Offer up $100K prize to the first person to break Mosconi's record (and have it officiated or live streamed), and the record will fall in 3 months.

Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com

Man, I can't believe his luck.....
..he gets as lucky as Efren.
 
I guess no one else caught that today is March 19. :grin:

For those that don't want to subtract, that is 57 years ago.

There is always one in the crowd that sees the obvious.
I missed that completely and it was a hanger. :banghead::banghead::banghead::banghead:
 
Springfield, Ohio March, 19, 1954. Today Willie Mosconi started a straight pool run that will not end until tomorrow morning after making 526 consecutive balls. It is predicted that this record will stand the test of time.:p

Who says you can't play 14:1 on an 8 footer?
 
I guess no one else caught that today is March 19. :grin:

For those that don't want to subtract, that is 57 years ago.

You made me do it (the math)... it was 58 years ago, if my calculator is correct.

Roger
 
Luckier, it would seem. Even Efren has never run 526 in 14.1! :D On topic though, this has been said many times before. Offer up $100K prize to the first person to break Mosconi's record (and have it officiated or live streamed), and the record will fall in 3 months.

Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com

A 57 year old record that can be regarded as the greatest reason why Mosconi remains the most famous pool player in history is not getting broken 3 months after someone puts up 100k. Professional pool players ARE competitors. The mere existence of a record is incentive enough for many of them to try and break it. They've BEEN trying. I'm not saying that a cash incentive wouldn't help. It would. It would definitely increase the interest in 14.1 and promote formats that would allow for big runs but trust me, nobody runs 300 and just stops. In order for the record to be broken, professional pool needs to be submerged in 14.1 for decades (like it was when Mosconi was around).
 
According to the 99 critical shots in pool. Michael Eufemia made a run on a 9" of 625 balls on 2-2-1960 with 50 witnesses that gave names and addresses. This was done at the logan billiard accademy in Brooklyn. So what gives?
 
Springfield, Ohio March, 19, 1954. Today Willie Mosconi started a straight pool run that will not end until tomorrow morning after making 526 consecutive balls. It is predicted that this record will stand the test of time.:p

Ah, the perils of Wikipedia - the exhibition took place on the 19th(one day)
The run took about 2 1/2 hours.

No, I wasn't there:)

Dale
 
According to the 99 critical shots in pool. Michael Eufemia made a run on a 9" of 625 balls on 2-2-1960 with 50 witnesses that gave names and addresses. This was done at the logan billiard accademy in Brooklyn. So what gives?

Not a single witness was there from start to finish. Anyone that was there from the start had left by the time he reached 500.
 
MAybe this is what Danny Harriman is doing at home... trying to break this record.

I heard Charlie Williams had a chance to break this record....
..but the lease ran out on the pool hall...:rolleyes:

..yeah, I was the guy who started a 'Charlie Williams is so slow' thread
 
Enjoy. I grabbed this off of the below site:

http://americanhistory.si.edu/archives/images/d9744-4.jpg



d9744-4.jpg
 
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