Sorry, no sound.Is there commentary on the stream? I have no sound. Go John!! :happydance:
Sorry, no sound.Is there commentary on the stream? I have no sound. Go John!! :happydance:
He made 2 balls on the break shot, so 450 (by their scoring).
For a while I was afraid he wasn't going to break through at Bull Shooters but he seems to have found the key. I liked his patterns much more tonight than last two nights I watched in person.That was a great run. John is close and there is no one in the world right now that is better at straight pool. Be Proud John
Sorry, no sound.
Sorry, didn’t see the 2nd ball go in- makes for a good, round number
For a while I was afraid he wasn't going to break through at Bull Shooters but he seems to have found the key. I liked his patterns much more tonight than last two nights I watched in person.
Yes. I think the 434 (with which there were some problems) was the previous recorded record. For that matter, some of the 300+ runs are probably better than anything posted before.Saw that miss. That sucks for JS.
That's probably the highest video recorded run?
I'd like to point out that John didn't have a 300 run today.Who runs 300 balls every day? Answer - No one! Only a few players have run 300 balls in their lifetime!
I'd like to point out that John didn't have a 300 run today.
He did have a 190 and a 168 and two other 100+ runs before the 450.
Have you rewatched? It starts at 1:02, if I’m not mistaken. And he spots those ballsIt would not bother me if John later claims 464 for this run rather than 450. Here's why.
The run prior to this big one was just 1 ball. Oddly, John placed the OB for the break shot without as much angle as usual. He made the break shot. But he had no good shot after the break, and played some sort of pack shot. A ball went in, but apparently not what he called. So he pulled both balls (the break ball and the one from the pack shot) out of the ball box, spotted them, and started playing again. He ran out the rack (the full 14 balls) and moved his coin to the "1" spot.
After 2 balls in the next rack, he swept his hand along the table by the head rail to remove something, and knocked the coin over by the corner pocket. After making the 3rd ball of the rack, he moved the coin back, but he put it on the starting point rather than on the "1" diamond.
Now, it is possible that he put the coin back to the starting point because he didn't want to count the first rack, given that it started with an open table rather than a full-rack break shot. But he also started quite a few other runs without re-racking. And starting runs without a BIH break shot on a full rack is what happens in a game, and that's what happened in Mosconi's 526.
So not counting those first 14 balls may have been intentional, but it might also have been a scoring mistake resulting from putting the coin on the wrong diamond after he knocked it out of place.
450 or 464?
Well the thing about yesterday's run -- and all of John's in Phoenix for that matter -- is that you can go back and re-watch. I did not see the start...It would not bother me if John later claims 464 for this run rather than 450. Here's why.
The run prior to this big one was just 1 ball. Oddly, John placed the OB for the break shot without as much angle as usual. He made the break shot. But he had no good shot after the break, and played some sort of pack shot. A ball went in, but apparently not what he called. So he pulled both balls (the break ball and the one from the pack shot) out of the ball box, spotted them, and started playing again. He ran out the rack (the full 14 balls) and moved his coin to the "1" spot.
After 2 balls in the next rack, he swept his hand along the table by the head rail to remove something, and knocked the coin over by the corner pocket. After making the 3rd ball of the rack, he moved the coin back, but he put it on the starting point rather than on the "1" diamond.
Now, it is possible that he put the coin back to the starting point because he didn't want to count the first rack, given that it started with an open table rather than a full-rack break shot. But he also started quite a few other runs without re-racking. And starting runs without a BIH break shot on a full rack is what happens in a game, and that's what happened in Mosconi's 526.
So not counting those first 14 balls may have been intentional, but it might also have been a scoring mistake resulting from putting the coin on the wrong diamond after he knocked it out of place.
450 or 464?
Well, we could call him Mr. 88.21% (=464/526) pending the results of the recount.:grin:Can we officially call him Mr. 450 now?
Great job John!