While acknowledging that those who choose not to acknowledge the run have very valid concerns, I think we've reached the point where each can make his/her own determination as to whether the run happened and what it has meant for pool. All things considered, as the run seems guarded in secrecy, and any opportunity to promote the game using the run has passed. I do not agree with those who say that John has any obligation to share the run, but each of us may accept or deny its legitimacy.
Whether its an official record in pool is a somewhat strange matter in the first place, as pool doesn't really keep records. Who had the highest TPA for an entire tournament? Who ran the most consecutive racks of nine ball in competition? Who had the most nine balls on the break in a single tournament? Who was the first player to win events on three continents in one pool year? Who hit the hardest ever nine ball break? The answer to questions like these is "nobody knows for sure because there is no governing body of pool dedicated to gathering and keeping the records." Why the BCA needed to review this record but not any other records in pool is anybody's guess, but the entire matter is swimming in a deep sea of mystery.
It's all as clear as mud.
Whether its an official record in pool is a somewhat strange matter in the first place, as pool doesn't really keep records. Who had the highest TPA for an entire tournament? Who ran the most consecutive racks of nine ball in competition? Who had the most nine balls on the break in a single tournament? Who was the first player to win events on three continents in one pool year? Who hit the hardest ever nine ball break? The answer to questions like these is "nobody knows for sure because there is no governing body of pool dedicated to gathering and keeping the records." Why the BCA needed to review this record but not any other records in pool is anybody's guess, but the entire matter is swimming in a deep sea of mystery.
It's all as clear as mud.