**********Information from Q-Master
Chinahov vs. Ouschan 11:00 AM
Pagulayan vs. Teutscher 2:00 PM
Winners play the Finals at 6:00PM
This was a spelling test.
**********Information from Q-Master
Chinahov vs. Ouschan 11:00 AM
Pagulayan vs. Teutscher 2:00 PM
Winners play the Finals at 6:00PM
This was a spelling test.
You know, I've seen it many times on here. Why doesn't pool get it's due on TV.
Here I'm watching the live feed on you tube with...855 other people watching.
pt -- I think the scoring was wrong again today for Alex, this time in his favor. When Alex made that last shot against Siekkinen -- the first ball of a new rack (15th ball of the prior rack) without racking the balls -- it was deemed to be his 150th point. By my count it was his 148th.
So yesterday the scoring made him risk losing after he was already out, and today the scoring had him out at 148 when getting to 150 was by no means a certainty.
[Of course, the players are responsible for the match score, so it is whatever they say it is. And I could be wrong.]
It was off numerous times, including the marking of fouls. Its nice for a free stream, but needs work.
pt -- I think the scoring was wrong again today for Alex, this time in his favor. When Alex made that last shot against Siekkinen -- the first ball of a new rack (15th ball of the prior rack) without racking the balls -- it was deemed to be his 150th point.( By my count it was his 148th.)
So yesterday the scoring made him risk losing after he was already out, and today the scoring had him out at 148 when getting to 150 was by no means a certainty.
[Of course, the players are responsible for the match score, so it is whatever they say it is. And I could be wrong.]
Ruslan Bar-b-q'd Albin, 150-17
Not the fully story. Albin let Ruslan to the table with a fairly open pack at 0-0. Then Ruslan ran 141. Missed a not so difficult back cut on the 8 ball. Albin ran out the rack, then screwed up. Ruslan then finished up.
Knockers gotta knock. Tough field bro. Make a TINY mistake and you're in your chair a WHILE. You think he's not an elite 14.1'r???I would agree with the first guy- that is a BBQ! BTW- where is "Mr. 600" in all of this? Seems like he put so much time in his pool life into promoting himself through practice play- as "Mr. 400" Mr. 14.1" Now "Mr. 600" that he feels the pressure to live up to the legendary status of his own making. Schmidt does not do well in top flight 14.1 COMPETITION - he fell apart here again this week.
I am NOT knocking his ability or his practice accomplishment - but I am saying that he has gone way out to achieve and promote his "practice play" accomplishments - that I think he has difficulty in top flight 14.1 competitive events because he himself created certain expectations that he has trouble handling those expectation when it comes to actual competition. Many of the other top 14.1 guys there this week are showing us the REAL difference between competitive play and practice play- it has NEVER been more obvious than this week !
I would agree with the first guy- that is a BBQ! BTW- where is "Mr. 600" in all of this? Seems like he put so much time in his pool life into promoting himself through practice play- as "Mr. 400" Mr. 14.1" Now "Mr. 600" that he feels the pressure to live up to the legendary status of his own making. Schmidt does not do well in top flight 14.1 COMPETITION - he fell apart here again this week.
I am NOT knocking his ability or his practice accomplishment - but I am saying that he has gone way out to achieve and promote his "practice play" accomplishments - that I think he has difficulty in top flight 14.1 competitive events because he himself created certain expectations that he has trouble handling those expectation when it comes to actual competition. Many of the other top 14.1 guys there this week are showing us the REAL difference between competitive play and practice play- it has NEVER been more obvious than this week !
Not the fully story. Albin let Ruslan to the table with a fairly open pack at 0-0. Then Ruslan ran 141. Missed a not so difficult back cut on the 8 ball. Albin ran out the rack, then screwed up. Ruslan then finished up.
Yep. Well said. Agree 100%.Anyone that thinks John Schmidt isn't among the elite 14.1 players today is delusional.
At their levels it only takes one mistake to lose a match, especially a really short match. Think of 9 ball races to 5, very similar in comparison.
If these matches was to ~1000, well, IMHO, "some" of the players would fall by the waist side.
Even in the midst of the elite, the ability to run 600+ balls is a rarity on "any" table and under "any" condition.
Jeff
I would agree with the first guy- that is a BBQ! BTW- where is "Mr. 600" in all of this? Seems like he put so much time in his pool life into promoting himself through practice play- as "Mr. 400" Mr. 14.1" Now "Mr. 600" that he feels the pressure to live up to the legendary status of his own making. Schmidt does not do well in top flight 14.1 COMPETITION - he fell apart here again this week.
I am NOT knocking his ability or his practice accomplishment - but I am saying that he has gone way out to achieve and promote his "practice play" accomplishments - that I think he has difficulty in top flight 14.1 competitive events because he himself created certain expectations that he has trouble handling those expectation when it comes to actual competition. Many of the other top 14.1 guys there this week are showing us the REAL difference between competitive play and practice play- it has NEVER been more obvious than this week !
I guarantee that guy can't run 20 balls but he's an expert knocker. Got him on lifetime ignore."Missed a not so difficult back cut on the 8 ball." :rotflmao1:
Schmidt fully acknowledges that he runs balls more easily outside of tournament competition. But he is a 14.1 tournament champion (2012 World event) and has other high finishes. This week he went 5-1 in the round robin stage, won his first single-elimination match, and narrowly lost his second match to a guy who is now waiting for the finals. Have you noticed that only one of the other top 14.1 champions (at least in US events) made it farther in this event than Schmidt -- that was Hohmann, who is also out now.
I wish you would just quit looking for opportunities to criticize Schmidt.
Schmidt fully acknowledges that he runs balls more easily outside of tournament competition. But he is a 14.1 tournament champion (2012 World event) and has other high finishes. This week he went 5-1 in the round robin stage, won his first single-elimination match, and narrowly lost his second match to a guy who is now waiting for the finals. Have you noticed that only one of the other top 14.1 champions (at least in US events) made it farther in this event than Schmidt -- that was Hohmann, who is also out now.
I wish you would just quit looking for opportunities to criticize Schmidt.
Anyone that thinks John Schmidt isn't among the elite 14.1 players today is delusional. At their levels it only takes one mistake to lose a match, especially a really short match. Think of 9 ball races to 5, very similar in comparison. If these matches was to ~1000, well, IMHO, "some" of the players would fall by the waist side. Even in the midst of the elite, the ability to run 600+ balls is a rarity on "any" table and under "any" condition.
Jeff