realtor1618
Registered
669 is the official record. 714 is not. Thats the bottom line as you asked for.I don't want to read 32 pages of this thread. What's the bottom line? No opinions, just facts. Is it officially 669 or 714?
669 is the official record. 714 is not. Thats the bottom line as you asked for.I don't want to read 32 pages of this thread. What's the bottom line? No opinions, just facts. Is it officially 669 or 714?
That's all I needed to know. Thanks.669 is the official record. 714 is not. Thats the bottom line as you asked for.
Truly contemptible!714 w/ cue ball fouls only & 669 w/all ball fouls. They changed the rule of cue ball fouls
only to all ball fouls at the review. Clearly, they were out to discredit Jayson's run! It's 714
in my eye's!
You mean John Schmidts gaff table? Jayson certainly didn't make his High run on a gaff table. Earls best for 6 days was 238 and Shane's was 308 all on the same table. John used heaters under his table with 6 inch corner pockets and 6.5 inch side pockets and played with no racking rules and polished and replaced the balls during his runs. As we have all got to see now John is a cheater and the public should demand to see the 626 run and have video experts view it frame by frame the same as Jaysons run to be truly fair. Jayson did none of the non sense that John did and has done his whole life and John was caught doing it just a few weeks ago.Even on the gaff table that would be an amazing accomplishment.
I
What is your source of that information?... John used ... 6 inch corner pockets and 6.5 inch side pockets ...
several local players that play in that poolhall.What is your source of that information?
They lied to you then. Can you name them? I don't like liars, and I'd like to know who they are.several local players that play in that poolhall.
We have no focus on John. We just want to finally tell the public the complete story of everythingJayson leapfrogged John. At this point that’s all that matters. I’m sympathetic to the possibility John’s run wouldn’t live up to the same scrutiny. I think it’s fair to expect the same level of scrutiny for all high run claims moving forward. Public release of the video needs to be a component of future runs since BCA are considering defining the official requirements of an attempt. But John’s run has been made moot. So to me it seems continued focus on him is childishly petty. It’s time to act like adults.
And if you were playing billiards and your finger touched an object ball but didn't move it much, would you still take the point?... A paper thin graze of a ball didn't affect anything
And if you were playing billiards and your finger touched an object ball but didn't move it much, would you still take the point?
At tournament carom play it's all ball fouls always. Call fouls on yourself.I wouldn't stop someone if they did that on me in league or a tournament, and neither has anyone said" that's a foul your done" to me
You mean John Schmidts gaff table? Jayson certainly didn't make his High run on a gaff table. Earls best for 6 days was 238 and Shane's was 308 all on the same table. John used heaters under his table with 6 inch corner pockets and 6.5 inch side pockets and played with no racking rules and polished and replaced the balls during his runs. As we have all got to see now John is a cheater and the public should demand to see the 626 run and have video experts view it frame by frame the same as Jaysons run to be truly fair. Jayson did none of the non sense that John did and has done his whole life and John was caught doing it just a few weeks ago.
Edited: A typo said that there was an OBJECT ball curve, of course I meant cue ball. I think that was clear from the context.Beg to differ which is which? See this 434 end and compare pocket shots
If we disregard the object ball curve controversy, the pockets do look like near 5 inch pockets. I should know, I played on those size pockets for a lot of my time playing pool. It would be very difficult to be 100% certain about this kind of thing due to camera distortion and the distance. All I can say is, the pocket size doesn't seem OBVIOUSLY larger than a 5 inch would look to me.
The claims that have been made about that table used by John Schmidt are as follows:
1. Sanded slate,
2. Heated slate
3. 6 inch pockets
4. Polished balls (continuously)
It's all conjecture until solid evidence is provided. So far I have seen none. That object ball curve looks super suspicious, but until hard evidence is provided or at least equal results are produced by experimental methods, nothing can be said for certain. The only thing I can say is, I've played pool for 20 years, and I've watched more Accu-Stats videos than is healthy for any human being, and I've never seen another ball behave like that on a level table. Never, unless you're talking about Cyclop balls or crazy 8 balls, that is. Not in snooker or even Billiards, either. There is only one explanation I find plausible and it is that the table isn't flat/and or- level. Is it deliberately out of level or not flat, or not, is the next question? We'll never know as the table has been atomized, never to be seen again, for all practical intents and purposes. Even if it were produced there would be no way to prove it's the same slate and impractically difficult, but not impossible to prove it's the same rails. So we'll never know for sure. This is why record tables should be kept for inspection before being dismantled. It would completely remove almost all concerns regarding shenanigans of this sort.
Of the 4 claims I think the heated slate is the least worrying to me personally, if there was any merit to it. It would in fact remove a lot of the environmental factor from the pool equation. I'm usually an old school kind of guy, but this would maybe be a step forward for our sport. I usually play in a dry climate but I think some people who don't would appreciate this a lot. It wouldn't really change the game, per se, but make it more uniform around the world. I'm having trouble seeing that as a bad thing for the pro game? We amateurs must put up with living without, as it would be impractically expensive. It's the same way in snooker, and it's completely fine.
I suppose the final question I need answered is:If we disregard the object ball curve controversy, the pockets do look like near 5 inch pockets. I should know, I played on those size pockets for a lot of my time playing pool. It would be very difficult to be 100% certain about this kind of thing due to camera distortion and the distance. All I can say is, the pocket size doesn't seem OBVIOUSLY larger than a 5 inch would look to me.
The claims that have been made about that table used by John Schmidt are as follows:
1. Sanded slate,
2. Heated slate
3. 6 inch pockets
4. Polished balls (continuously)
It's all conjecture until solid evidence is provided. So far I have seen none. That object ball curve looks super suspicious, but until hard evidence is provided or at least equal results are produced by experimental methods, nothing can be said for certain. The only thing I can say is, I've played pool for 20 years, and I've watched more Accu-Stats videos than is healthy for any human being, and I've never seen another ball behave like that on a level table. Never, unless you're talking about Cyclop balls or crazy 8 balls, that is. Not in snooker or even Billiards, either. There is only one explanation I find plausible and it is that the table isn't flat/and or- level. Is it deliberately out of level or not flat, or not, is the next question? We'll never know as the table has been atomized, never to be seen again, for all practical intents and purposes. Even if it were produced there would be no way to prove it's the same slate and impractically difficult, but not impossible to prove it's the same rails. So we'll never know for sure. This is why record tables should be kept for inspection before being dismantled. It would completely remove almost all concerns regarding shenanigans of this sort.
Of the 4 claims I think the heated slate is the least worrying to me personally, if there was any merit to it. It would in fact remove a lot of the environmental factor from the pool equation. I'm usually an old school kind of guy, but this would maybe be a step forward for our sport. I usually play in a dry climate but I think some people who don't would appreciate this a lot. It wouldn't really change the game, per se, but make it more uniform around the world. I'm having trouble seeing that as a bad thing for the pro game? We amateurs must put up with living without, as it would be impractically expensive. It's the same way in snooker, and it's completely fine.
I can visualize the spittle flying when you type this. Calm down!!You mean John Schmidts gaff table? Jayson certainly didn't make his High run on a gaff table. Earls best for 6 days was 238 and Shane's was 308 all on the same table. John used heaters under his table with 6 inch corner pockets and 6.5 inch side pockets and played with no racking rules and polished and replaced the balls during his runs. As we have all got to see now John is a cheater and the public should demand to see the 626 run and have video experts view it frame by frame the same as Jaysons run to be truly fair. Jayson did none of the non sense that John did and has done his whole life and John was caught doing it just a few weeks ago.