St. Louie Louie was there, with Buddy Hall, Jimmy Reid, Dallas West, who ran 10 racks
CJ did you ever match up against Keith McCready back in the day, since you were both action guys?
Yes, we played at my pool room in Dallas. 8 Ahead Session on a "Triple Shimmed Gold Crown Table" - Keith won the flip, broke and ran out, then broke, didn't make a ball and never got another shot. It was not unusual to run 6 to 8 racks back then, we were just geared that way to win.
I went over to Keith after that to shake his hand and Keith looked at me, shurgged and said "I can't complain, I played perfect."
Believe me, Keith has dished out the packages MANY times in his gambling days. Sometimes you hit that really "High Gear" out of self defense. I first saw Keith play when I was 17 at the big Bar Table tournament in Clinton, Iowa and he offered anyone in the place the last two on the bar table.
Keith has my utmost respect as a player and an entertaining character/personality. Keith was very unfortunate that the billiard industy couldn't figure out how to capitalize more on his role in the 'Color of Money'. There's always been too much "in fighting" and finger pointing fueled by jealousy and anomosity.
I come from the era when the "Big Money Matches" were highlighted at the tournaments and players all seemed like Movie Stars.
I walked into that Bar Table Tournament in Clinton Iowa and it was like walking into a movie set. It was like the "who's who" of professional players.
"King James" Rempe was there in a taylored blue and white three piece suit warming up with Mike Sigel, who was the first player I ever saw talk while HE was shooting. I remember studying how Sigel held the cue, his bridge and his back hand looked like he was playing a musical instrument when he played. I never saw him shoot the "wrong shot" or shoot before he knew exactly what he was going to do....and then do it flawlessly in his prime.
St. Louie Louie was there, with Buddy Hall, Jimmy Reid, Dallas West (who ran 10 racks in a row during the tournament),"The Miz" Steve Mizerak, Earl Strickland, "Pretty Boy Floyd" Jimmy Mataya talking like he owned every town he was in, with people flocked around the table to hear his next story.
And I remember watching LA Keith playing with that BIG BALL on the bar table. He was legendary and no one wanted anything to do with him on that "Bar Rag". I vividly remember the table he was playing on and how he made that Big Ball "get up and talk". He would break with a smooth stoke and hit them perfectly square and the cue ball with come back and STOP DEAD in it's tracks. It looked like he could run 20's the way he broke.