Yes, the thread title here represents a very strong statement. After all, Ga Young Kim is surely one of the ten best players in the history of women’s pro pool. I’d probably put her at #6, but that’s a debate for another day.
Obviously, Chezka Centeno is not yet mentionable with Ga Young Kim, and yet, she is on a similar trajectory.
I recall watching Ga Young Kim in the late 1990s. She had a really sweet stroke and ran the balls with great facility, but her decision making needed a lot of development. Her billiards knowledge was obvious, yet she had yet to learn how to apply it in both kicking and defensive play. I remember thinking that if she became a more complete player she could become one of the best ever. She did become a more complete player and improved her break and became one of the best of all time.
Chezka, to me, seems the same. She already has one of the sweetest strokes anyone has ever seen in a woman and she plays the patterns well, but her safety play, her kicking, her general tactical conceptualization and her break still need work. Yes, she reminds me of the youthful Ga Young Kim in this regard.
I think we may be watching the emergence of a legendary player here. It will be fun to watch. Wishing her every possible success as she continues to wow us with her exceptional play. The sky is the limit for Chezka.
I enjoy Chezka's game as much as anyone. She is so natural, smooth, and quick, I sometimes wonder how anyone ever beats her.
At least until a seemingly rushed, unforced error comes out of nowhere. She's not yet 25, so still quite young with time to improve. But that got me thinking...
Stu, in your experience. How common is it for pool players to make great strides in their game after age 25 or so? Specifically, the all-time greats?
I can't think of any, but I've of course not followed pool for nearly as long or as closely as you. I think to other sports (baseball, football, basketball, etc) and most every great player was a star by 25 or never really would be. The exceptions are very few and far between.
I think pool has a gentler aging curve than the more physically demanding sports, but I'm not yet convinced it's not a similar shape. That is, top players are top players by their early 20s, and folks don't develop "late." If true, Chezka might be a tantalizing talent, one we always think will take the next step, but never quite does.
Now, clearly, she's already a top-5 female player, so it's hard to fault her. But when she could be a top-5 female player of all time? That might be harder to see if we are still talking how she would need to improve to get there, rather than just maintain what she's already doing.
(I'll keep rooting for her, regardless.)