SJM at the 2022 World Games

sjm

Older and Wiser
Silver Member
I just returned from five days at the World Games in which I attended all sessions of the billiards events.

The venue was magnificent, with four tables side by side, one for each of men’s nine-ball, women’s nine-ball, carom and snooker. The tables were well spaced, the seating was ample, and most of the sessions were fairly crowded on the side of the room intended for fans, though not at all crowded on the side meant chiefly for media.

Nine Ball- Men’s Division
Round 1 nearly brought a big upset in the Filler vs Styer match. Tyler played well and led most of the way, reaching 9-4 ahead in the race to eleven. As is often the case in big comebacks, the player chasing needs some luck along the way and Filler’s big roll came in rack 14 when he missed the seven-ball but left Tyler cushion-hooked. Josh then rallied all the way to 10-10. At double hill, Tyler hit a truly brilliant three rail safety off the one ball, leaving Josh hooked with a tough kick. It seemed this would be the match-winning shot, but Filler kicked it in and ran out for an electrifying victory.

Form seemed to hold most of the way and the men’s division featured two more truly superb matches. Yapp and Pehlivanovic had a match in which no player ever had a two-rack lead on the way to 7-7, but Pehlivanovic closed it out with superb play for an impressive victory. Yapp would continue his fine play to win bronze.

The final was a dandy. Pehlivanovic played something close to perfect pool on his way to a 6-4 lead. Neither player missed a ball in those ten racks. Filler, who wasn’t creating much with his break, clawed his way back to 8-8 and then found his strongest game to win the gold, but one had to walk away from the match thinking that the youthful Pehlivanovic, who settled for silver, has some big titles ahead of him. What a player!

Nine-ball: Women’s Division
There were two excellent matches in Round 1. Jennifer Barretta and Brittany Bryant reached double hill when Jennifer seemed to bet the match on a tough bank of the seven-ball. She made it but had to run into the eight and wasn’t left with a shot, which cost her the match. Another dazzling match was Pia Filler vs Rubilen Amit, which also reached double hill. At double hill, Pia won the race to the first good shot, earning ball in hand on the one, but failed to run out and Amit prevailed. Pia’s game is developing very nicely.

Kelly Fisher was clearly best at the World Games, but she had one scare along the way against Brittany Bryant in the quarterfinals. Brittany led 7-5 and had a shot at a seven-nine combination that I’d guess was a 60% chance. When she missed, the tide of the match turned and Kelly advanced.

Kelly outlasted Chou in the final and crowd favorite Yuki from Japan won bronze.

A Quick Note on the Carom Event
I saw several three-cushion matches, the best of which was Daniel Sanchez vs Eddie Mercxx , which reached 38-38 in the race to 40 before Eddie closed it out. Dick Jaspers was by far the best and easily won the gold medal.

Socially
I was not very busy socially but met some new people in both the tournament room and at breakfast. I got to chat at great length with the Federation Presidents of both Poland and Germany and met the Federation President of Austria one morning when I breakfasted with Albin Ouschan. I also met Josh Filler’s coach, as well as Thorsten Hohmann’s coach. I ran into some friends, but not as many as I normally would at a pool event. I went out to dinner just once, with a group that included SVB, John Morra, Jennifer Barretta, Hunter Lombardo and Ivan Lee, and we all had a grand old time.

I caught up on a few occasions with WPA president Ian Anderson, and I complimented him on the superb production of the World Games billiards events and applauded the lift of the ban on Russian players. He seemed every bit as happy about it as I was.

An unexpected pleasure was meeting Shane Tyree, executive of the BCA, whom I’d seen before but had never met. He asked to have a chat and I was happy to comply. Shane came across as a conscientious and capable manager very dedicated to our sport and its future. Yes, he made a very nice first impression and I made a new friend.

In Conclusion
The World Games billiards events were really a treat and I’m so glad I went.
 
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Always look forward to your posts or comments , well written as always

By the way, not envious at all that you went out for dinner with SVB and Jennifer!!

pS if you want to pass on my contact details to Jennifer, please feel free😀
 
I failed to mention the snooker, but with full respect for the medalists, the snooker was not "world class" and none of the pros were there. The highest break on my radar was 95 by the Egyptian silver medalist whose name escapes me and breaks of over 50 weren't very numerous in the event. Nonetheless, watching the snooker was entertaining.
 
What did you think about SVB throwing in the towel early in his match and just mailing it in since the break wasn't working for him? At least that's what Filler said. And what was with the actual forfeiture by Biado, I think it was?
 
What did you think about SVB throwing in the towel early in his match and just mailing it in since the break wasn't working for him? At least that's what Filler said. And what was with the actual forfeiture by Biado, I think it was?
I'm hardly in a position to validate or invalidate Filler's claim, but several felt that Shane, especially from 7-2 on, got frustrated and started rushing some shots.

As for the forfeit, it was by Omar Al-Shaheen, whose luggage did not make it to Alabama, and he ended up having to borrow a cue from another player just to play. At 7-3 down, he decided that he just couldn't compete any further without his own equipment, so he unscrewed. Sad story for sure.
 
I'm hardly in a position to validate or invalidate Filler's claim, but several felt that Shane, especially from 7-2 on, got frustrated and started rushing some shots.

As for the forfeit, it was by Omar Al-Shaheen, whose luggage did not make it to Alabama, and he ended up having to borrow a cue from another player just to play. At 7-3 down, he decided that he just couldn't compete any further without his own equipment, so he unscrewed. Sad story for sure.
Thank you for the clarification.
 
nice report! getting this kind of insight is really azb at its best.

would like to have seen that styer - filler match. going by how damn near unstoppable filler is right now styer must have played pretty flawless up until 9-4?
 
I appreciate the road trip update and on-site coverage of the events. Virtually, it was challenging to see the pool events, and as stated, the snooker did not have today's super pros attending. I thought the coverage of the entire event for billiards was not good. They had a gymnastic commentator commentating the snooker match, as an example, and it was obvious after a few minutes that she didn't even know how to play snooker and how the game went. With the amount of pool organization representatives there on-site, it is a shame that pool could not shine brightly on a virtual scale. Those sanctioning dollars at work sending pool organization members to the World Games 2022 in Birmingham. I hope they had a good time.

On a good note, the cream rose to the top for the gold medals in pool. Other than that, the coverage online and elsewhere was not good.
 
I appreciate the road trip update and on-site coverage of the events. Virtually, it was challenging to see the pool events, and as stated, the snooker did not have today's super pros attending. I thought the coverage of the entire event for billiards was not good. They had a gymnastic commentator commentating the snooker match, as an example, and it was obvious after a few minutes that she didn't even know how to play snooker and how the game went. With the amount of pool organization representatives there on-site, it is a shame that pool could not shine brightly on a virtual scale. Those sanctioning dollars at work sending pool organization members to the World Games 2022 in Birmingham. I hope they had a good time.

On a good note, the cream rose to the top for the gold medals in pool. Other than that, the coverage online and elsewhere was not good.
Thanks for that. I have often argued before that a tournament report is not complete without some input from those that experienced it on the internet.
 
nice report! getting this kind of insight is really azb at its best.

would like to have seen that styer - filler match. going by how damn near unstoppable filler is right now styer must have played pretty flawless up until 9-4?
Hope you get to see it. Styer played some exceptional pool and very nearly pulled off the victory.
 
Hope you get to see it. Styer played some exceptional pool and very nearly pulled off the victory.
Hi Stu - I’m glad I stumbled upon this thread, but more importantly, your wisdom during the games. I don’t really post here on AZB but this is Morgan (of the two brothers from the stands).

It was a pleasure for you to join us and point out the good plays especially in the Carom and Snooker disciplines. Look forward to seeing you again on the road at another tournament.
 
I screwed around online for about 10-15 minutes trying to find the final but the channel linked on their website was showing gymnastics or something like that so I gave up.

I wonder what the qualification process was for this tournament. It was a small field with a mix of top pros like filler and Albin, fringe pros like hunter lombardo, and then a few people I’ve never even heard of. Hardly a world class field I’d say.
 
I screwed around online for about 10-15 minutes trying to find the final but the channel linked on their website was showing gymnastics or something like that so I gave up.

I wonder what the qualification process was for this tournament. It was a small field with a mix of top pros like filler and Albin, fringe pros like hunter lombardo, and then a few people I’ve never even heard of. Hardly a world class field I’d say.
The field was world class in every respect.

Participants SVB, Albin Ouschan, Josh Filler, Ko Ping Chung, Aloysisus Yapp, Carlo Biado, and Fracisco Sanchez-Ruiz are seven of the top fourteen players in the world based on Fargo, and the field had just 16 players. Zielinski, Pehlivanovic and Morra, three other very elite players, were also in the field. For a sixteen-player invitational mandating internationally diverse participation, the field was about as tough as it gets. Nine of them had a Fargo over 800.

I was, however, surprised by the absence of Jayson Shaw. Great Britain usually gets a spot in the World Games and, as we know, Appleton even won it once upon a time.
 
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Hi Stu - I’m glad I stumbled upon this thread, but more importantly, your wisdom during the games. I don’t really post here on AZB but this is Morgan (of the two brothers from the stands).

It was a pleasure for you to join us and point out the good plays especially in the Carom and Snooker disciplines. Look forward to seeing you again on the road at another tournament.
Yes, Morgan, it was great to meet you and I'm glad we got to sweat a couple of matches together, especially the carom gold medal match in which Dick Jaspers put on an absolute clinic.

See you on the tournament trail.
 
I could not find any streaming coverage of the event at all, which sucks as I wanted to see the carom stuff. And was it only really 16 players? I'd figured it would've been at least 32.

Regardless, thank you for the report. Did you happen to ask the BCA guy if they will actually show in the future support for the pro game? Or are they just happy.doimg whatever it is they do these days?
 
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