Question about Jose Parica

Yep,
I lived in Garden Grove in 69, & 70 ( a few miles away ) and was a regular at Daisy Mae’s…
It was all night action after the bars closed at 2:00 am. The main players then
were Percy , Charlie the Ape, Mario, Sergio, and me, Talljeff… Plus all the dead money that
stumbled in and had no chance of winning… I practically lived in the joint every night for those two years.
I was young then ( 26/27 ) and did my share of performance enhancing drugs that helped me stay
awake for hours, sometimes days when the money was there for the taking… I was on the rise then
as a pool player and totally hooked on the fact that it didn’t involve punching a time clock or earning an
hourly wage at some job I hated doing! It was an amazing high that youth and no responsibility allowed…
It and my pool career was short lived though, when I married in January of 71 and we had a son born in April
of 72, but during that short span from 66 to 71 it was quite a ride with many good memories…
Just a quick hello to all who are still breathing and were there also… 👋
Thanks Jeff, YES, I remember you! You got right in there and mixed it up with the best of them. You could damn sure play on those little boxes with that big ball!
 
you must compare at their peak not at the same time. two different scenarios if trying to define who was best.

don willis
jose
efrin
lassiter
mosconi
mizerack
buddy hall
mike segal and others

and others at their PEAK beat every single other person they played or was a favorite to.
who was better than who??
I would take Nick Varner over Sigel in this list. Sigel lacked heart under pressure. He won a lot of tournaments because he played in a lot of tournaments. Put him heads up under pressure and he would be whining because he was a whiner.
 
WIN! He beat everybody for the cash. In truth, his cue ball control was superb. He rolled the ball more like Earl, but could do it with even better speed control, and did not require as much power to get position. He threaded the cue ball around the table like it was on radar. Buddy played all the angles perfectly, but Jose created ways to get position when there wasn't any angle available.

I've always said Earl had the highest speed of any tournament player due to his ability to string mulitple racks in every match, with sixes and sevens being the norm. Buddy was simply a champion's champion, at his best when the going got tough and he was up against another top player, he rose to the occasion. All that said, neither one of them was anxious to match up with Jose.
Thanks, Jay.
 
I would take Nick Varner over Sigel in this list. Sigel lacked heart under pressure. He won a lot of tournaments because he played in a lot of tournaments. Put him heads up under pressure and he would be whining because he was a whiner.
He's also the only player to win over 100 major titles including nine tournaments in a row..?
 
Thank you T411 for "liking" a couple of my previous posts on this old thread.

I just re-watched the "You can put that on the internet" thread between Keith McCready and Alex Pagulayan, and I can't believe I never noticed and/or thought about this previously. The last game in the hill-hill thriller, Keith bends down to shoot the 5 left-handed and pulls back. Keith accidentally moved the 9 ball. Instead of losing because of all-ball foul rule, Alex walked up to the table and moved the 9 ball back, allowing Keith to continue shooting for the win.

Shot I'm talking about --> Alex v. Keith at 2003 US Open
Fantastic share jam…..back before pool got soft….mostly just robotic boredom now..oh for the days of Keith, buddy, Louie, earl and two dozen more I could name of course. I was blessed to be a part of those real good years from the 70’s on til pool got soft. Thx again.
 
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