Wow, just got home and it was one hell of an event. I saw the last two days of the event. Some very fine pool was played at Turning Stone, but racks weren't being strung very often through completion of Saturday's play by anyone not named Van Boening.
Saturday's Play
SVB was dominant. He wiped the floor with nearly every opponent. Jeremy Sossei was also very impressive, but had to work much harder to stay undefeated. Tommy Tokoph also managed to stay undefeated, with his best moment being a solid win over Estonian Dennis Grabe. The Finn Petri Makkonen played well, too, and managed a fine win over Jayson Shaw. The aforementioned six players would join Danny Hewitt and Zion Zvi in Sunday's action.
Eventual champion Shaw was grinding but certainly not steamrolling anybody. Hatch was about to go up 8-7 on him before an improbable error cost him the match, Makkonen put him on the B-side and Jayson had to survive a double-hill thriller against John Morra just to get to Sunday.
The way I saw things at end of day Saturday was that SVB was playing at a level where he looked completely unbeatable. Nobody looked ready to give him a stiff test.
Sunday 's Play
Shaw and Grabe easilly eliminated Hewitt and Zvi and the field was down to six. In winnners-side action, SVB and Sossei scored convincing victories over Makkonen and Tokoph. In the next round, Shaw won easily over Tokoph to eliminate him.
Makkonen and Grabe produced a classic. My guess is that they both shot over .900 and the quality of play was simply breathtaking. Grabe came from 6-3 behind and found himself 8-7 ahead before a three rail inside english follow on the eight ball scratched to bring the contest to double hill. In the end, Makkonen had to bet the match on a difficult shot on the four ball. In a shot that I feel he rushed a little, he missed and sold out the match, with Grabe moving on to play Shaw in the quarterfinal.
SVB crushed Sossei in the hot seat match, and it still looked like he'd cruise to the title. There was still no hint of what was to come, as the level of play of the other three still standing (Sossei, Shaw, Grabe) just wasn't that high.
Grabe and Shaw had a really good match and, if my memory serves, Grabe led 6-5. After Jayson won the next rack to tie it, he snapped the nine on the break for a 7-6 lead and went on to score the victory. Good match for sure, and Grabe settled for a fourth place finish. Shaw was still grinding, but there was no hint of the Shaw we saw in 2017, and unless that Jayson was going to show up, SVB would surely cruise to the title.
Before the Shaw vs. Sossei semifinal, Mike Zuglan announced a half hour break so Cardigan Kid and I chose to use the break to grab a meal together. By the time we returned, Sossei and Shaw were tied at 3-3, but this match turned on a dime. Sossei missed a virtual hanger on a five ball at 4-4 and it not only proved the defining moment of that match but of the entire event. After finishing out that rack for a 5-4 lead, Shaw broke and ran the next four to eliminate Sossei. Moments later, his wife arrived with his two daughters, so Jayson's mood could hardly have been better.
It appeared, based on the Sossei match, that the Shaw of 2017 was back, but could he sustain this level of play in the race to 13 final? As it turns out, the answer was yes. Shane went wrong in rack six. After a Jayson scratch on the break, Shane had a routine out to pull even at 3-3 but butchered it and Shaw punished him with that rack and three straight break and run racks. It was 7-2 and every indication was that Shaw was in dead stroke. It was really something to behold. Shane would not come back and Shaw won his sixth title at Turning Stone.
No doubt, many will feel that this was the chalk final, but the real story was that SVB had cruised his way there, while Shaw overcame a lot of obstacles to get there and really only found his best game in the very closing stages of the event.
It is the overpowering Jayson Shaw that comes to mind for most of us when we think about him, but this past weekend, we saw Jayson the grinder for most of the tournament. The overpowering version of Shaw showed up just in time!
Well played, Jayson, and congratulations,