Maybe someone can help me unravel the mystery of the greatest pool trick I ever saw, and I saw it done on several occasions. The man who did this trick was Jimmy Moore, one of the all time great pool players. Interestingly enough this trick did not requite using a cue or shooting any balls. He did it with his hands!
Jimmy would put all the balls in the ball box where the balls came down on a ball return table. He would reach into the box with both hands, all the time looking up at his audience or even the ceiling, and rummage them around to mix them up. Then he would grab three balls in each hand and quickly throw them out onto the table, rolling them rapidly toward the other end. At the same moment as the balls hit the table and started rolling Jimmy would shout out a number, like 48 or 52.
Here is the amazing part - that number would be exactly what the six balls would add up to each and every time he did it! He never missed either. It seemed like he could instantly add up all six numbers the moment they hit the table. My question is, how did he do it? To this day I've never been able to figure this one out. I've even asked his son Jimmy Jr. how his dad did that trick and he just smiled and said his dad knew how to do it.
I suspect there may be some old timers like me who actually saw Jimmy "throw the balls" as he liked to call it. Anybody have any ideas how he did it? I'm still stumped.
P.S. I think he actually did it with more than six balls sometimes as well.
Glad I checked out this thread. The more well known instance Jimmy doing this was the first Lengends of Pocket Billiards in January 1982, at Harrah's hotel and casino, Atlantic City. This was the only of three Lengends tournaments where they did trick shots. I was in the audience. Mosconi won the tournament, and the trick shots were a pain the ass, as they took a lot of time to set up.
Jimmy's trick shot was, as you say, counting balls. He mixed the balls randomly, threw out different numbers of balls, and spoke the combined additive number before the balls hit the opposite cushion. A lot of theories, he was very quick at counting the numbers, maybe colors, who knows. But he mixed randomly, and threw out increasing numbers of balls.
As a side note, Joe Balsis, the "Meatman," did a couple shots, one of which he called Boiled Ham. Mosconi did some of his normal shots, including the "Drunkard," where he hits a ball through a spreading bunch of balls to the side pocket. Mosconi also did the short masse two ball shot. Luther Lassiter did the railroad shot with the three cues wedged in one pocket. Irving Crane did one of many four ball shots where you make all four.
Now and then you'll catch these tournaments on ESPN Classic, or something like that. Some of the actual matches are on YouTube, but I haven't seen the 1982 trick shots there. There were two more Legends tournaments. 1983 was the Claridge Hotel in Atlantic City, won by Lassiter, and 1984 was Lake Kiameisha, New York, won by Moore. Brings back memories.
All the best,
WW