mario he is up there. still has time of course, but i have a feeling he won't.
naoyuki oi is another one. don't think he will.
naoyuki oi is another one. don't think he will.
basically i started it with some names many newer players never heard of that could beat many or most of the tournament winners. and some even after the tournament would challenge him for the prize money. how about that..
Too much talent these days. Both these cats are fine players but compared to the elite they're semi-shortstops.mario he is up there. still has time of course, but i have a feeling he won't.
naoyuki oi is another one. don't think he will.
Too much talent these days. Both these cats are fine players but compared to the elite they're semi-shortstops.
yep, some fade those scars better than others for sure.also a history of dogging it in semis/finals, so there are probably mental humps in both cases
This info is probably also available in the Goldmine (NBN issues) on AZB, but I happen to have a complete run of Pool and Billiard Magazine...What was the field like?
It was at CJ's PCA's FIRST event in Dallas. Earl winning that $$ so early really skewed CJ's funding for the tour. IIRC they only had one more event, the Hollywood Park event won by Hopkins over Matlock in the final.This info is probably also available in the Goldmine (NBN issues) on AZB, but I happen to have a complete run of Pool and Billiard Magazine...
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For those who are wondering about some of the missing names, this was at the time that some players were having issues with the Pro Tour, and shortly after this, CJ started his pro organization. One of the first of CJ's events was the tournament where Earl Strickland ran the 11 racks for the million dollar bonus.
Not sure why Junior's name is there, he played so few tournaments, just stuck around for the actoin.in the past when there were not lots of tournaments and players were gamblers , there were so many very top players that never even entered one or tried to win.
most, few even knew their names because we did not have the internet.
just a couple// bernie swartz,, norm hitchcock,, joey spaeth, weldon rogers, richie ambrose ,mike euphemia, jimmy marino,
cuban joey, etc. all could beat anyone on a given day
Flamethrower.... Reno 80's First love.Maybe not the best of this group but George Breedlove is a guy a i thought was going to win everything. First time i saw him play here in Tulsa i thought how can anybody fade this action? He won a few events on tour and did really well in action matches but i had him picked to be an Open type player. Harriman had the chops but he was/is nuttier than squirrel-shit. I know people who tried taking him on the road and they said they needed therapy after just a couple weeks. Reynolds would have to run extra shifts to make all the tin-foil for his hats.
He came to the Billiard Palace in Tulsa when J. McDermott had it. Round the clock action. This guy scorched everyone he played.Flamethrower.... Reno
One of the slowest players ever. But also one of the best in 14.1.Really good 14.1 player(324 hi run) who came in 2nd in US Open one year but that was about it. He got to be pretty fair 9b player but never won anything big.
Shannon and Ginky did win some big ones. The other three guys did not. I may make a caveat for Tang though. He won both divisions (9-Ball and One Pocket) at the Hard Times Jamboree back in early 2000. The field was full of good players including Parica, Efren, Amar and Kim. He also won the Swanee Tourney back then with a stacked field of 128 players.Here's the group that Might.... have the one you seek.
CJ was world champion, as a brief search will show.*
Yes, Wiley won a tournament on which ESPN pasted the words World Championship. And it had good money because of ESPN. But, to me, it was nothing like a world championship event. I have posted on this more than once. The men's singles portion of this affair was an invitational 16-player single-elimination event with races to 7. So the winner played just 4 races to 7 to win the title. And the event was played during the same week as a PBT (Pro Billiards Tour) event that had a far stronger field, none of whom played in the ESPN event. Here's what I posted about it in a thread in 2014:CJ won probably the biggest tournament of the 1990's, when he won the ESPN World Championship held in Santa Rosa, CA in the 1990's. I actually did some commentary alongside Lon McEachern of World Series of Poker fame there. CJ won something like 75 or 80 thou at that event.