Cole Dickson's practice session routine

I'm gonna go ice the pulled muscle I got in my arm for patting myself on the back for what I now know to be a piddlin' 193.😉

Nothing piddling about a 193! Most, including me, have never ran nearly that many. My focus was on extracting as much cash as possible. The ratty old hall Jesse owned, Shoppers Pool Hall, was my safe haven. I practiced there, never gambled for more than a beer. My record I was working to improve was six balls, banks, during regulation play on a snooker table. Most things have been lost to memory. I can't remember first nice score, my first tournament win, how many racks strung at each game. During my best years I let pool become a job. Asking what I did is a lot like asking what I did on a job a few decades ago. I don't remember.

The names of the places I stumbled on while on the road, the names of people I played, I don't remember. They weren't important at the time. The places I might remember where they were at if there was good action there. People lying about their name was so common that I normally forgot their names by the time I walked out the door. Today I wonder. I won many a pool cue after busting people, dozens. Some were supposed to be valuable cues but I played off the wall, part of my schtick, so today I wonder what some of those sticks might have been. I usually gave them away or sold them for a few bucks. I remember one guy screaming like a wounded virgin when I had already sold the cue when he came to get it back the next night. He didn't ask me to hold it, I didn't.


you are a much bigger favorite to break someone playing game by game rather than a set.

I tried to avoid playing by the set. Playing by the game lets you control the flow so much better. Air barrels for a game were a lot less painful than losing getting paid for a set too. The closest action was in East Baton Rouge Parish. I learned fast that posting was illegal there and if playing for more than pocket change, foolish. Somebody who had a buddy that was a cop would dime you out if there was more than a hundred or so on the light. A quick call, the money confiscated and a quick split, nothing you could do since you had been involved in an illegal activity.

Main thing, playing by the game the other player was often one shot away from winning, hard to quit. Easier to slip twenty a game out of someone's pocket than a hundred for a race to five. When people got down playing sets they would often quit you if they got even. One reason for letting people up the bet, so they never got back to even. A little ahead or behind they would keep playing. There was a psychological thing about getting back to zero after being in the hole that made it a good time to quit. I learned never to let someone get back to even, a little ahead or behind was much better! Playing by the game you could let the other person win some, sets were usually one and done. Had to win the first since in the real world most people gladly quit winner if it had been a hard fight. Had to win the second set to avoid letting the person get even and it was rare somebody two sets down went for three in routine play. Somebody that would hang in for hours playing sets was usually a road player or full time gambler. Talking things you already know but I'm sure many readers don't. There is a rhythm to the gambling dance and it took a few years to learn it.

The small time hustlers would keep stalling while raising the bet. It was funny. I was stalling too but with them letting me win I was building a small pile of their money. In the bars in the sixties or seventies the time to make a move was usually twenty a game, sometimes fifty if I was waving around a fairly thick roll. There would be a slight change in their posture or movements and it was obvious that they had came off the stall. I did too, and the game was on! The funny part, I was playing on their money every inch of the way. I often made a week or so pay without risking a cent of my money other than the first game. I loved to compete with the road players but the local wannabe hustlers were easy money in the bank. I liked to hit balls so I was a grinder by nature.

Jay, dirt tracking is when things get deep! I was spun out in the fourth turn. Could have caught it but first place would have been more like fifth or I might get hung on the steel wall and not cash at all. Instead, I romped on the throttle, steered to tighten the spin instead of come out of it, and finished in first place while spinning a few hundred feet! Anudder time I flew through the air far enough to stand the car on it's nose and the damned thing stood there! The announcer said I had flipped, people came running, finally it fell greasy side down! I finished the race.

You can get out the hip boots anytime I start a story "Me and Bobby". He could get in crap just walking to his mailbox a hundred feet from his house. Anything that included Bobby was an adventure. I saw him run eight racks dead cold. Took him on the road two days later. I don't think I ever saw him string more than two racks again, lifetime! I guess he had incentive when he ran eight racks. We had been pulling wrenches under an eighteen wheeler all day and we were playing partners for a beer each. I had gotten up twice when I had thirteen beers in front of me and hadn't ran a rack.

Hu
 
Nothing piddling about a 193! Most, including me, have never ran nearly that many. My focus was on extracting as much cash as possible. The ratty old hall Jesse owned, Shoppers Pool Hall, was my safe haven. I practiced there, never gambled for more than a beer. My record I was working to improve was six balls, banks, during regulation play on a snooker table. Most things have been lost to memory. I can't remember first nice score, my first tournament win, how many racks strung at each game. During my best years I let pool become a job. Asking what I did is a lot like asking what I did on a job a few decades ago. I don't remember.

The names of the places I stumbled on while on the road, the names of people I played, I don't remember. They weren't important at the time. The places I might remember where they were at if there was good action there. People lying about their name was so common that I normally forgot their names by the time I walked out the door. Today I wonder. I won many a pool cue after busting people, dozens. Some were supposed to be valuable cues but I played off the wall, part of my schtick, so today I wonder what some of those sticks might have been. I usually gave them away or sold them for a few bucks. I remember one guy screaming like a wounded virgin when I had already sold the cue when he came to get it back the next night. He didn't ask me to hold it, I didn't.




I tried to avoid playing by the set. Playing by the game lets you control the flow so much better. Air barrels for a game were a lot less painful than losing getting paid for a set too. The closest action was in East Baton Rouge Parish. I learned fast that posting was illegal there and if playing for more than pocket change, foolish. Somebody who had a buddy that was a cop would dime you out if there was more than a hundred or so on the light. A quick call, the money confiscated and a quick split, nothing you could do since you had been involved in an illegal activity.

Main thing, playing by the game the other player was often one shot away from winning, hard to quit. Easier to slip twenty a game out of someone's pocket than a hundred for a race to five. When people got down playing sets they would often quit you if they got even. One reason for letting people up the bet, so they never got back to even. A little ahead or behind they would keep playing. There was a psychological thing about getting back to zero after being in the hole that made it a good time to quit. I learned never to let someone get back to even, a little ahead or behind was much better! Playing by the game you could let the other person win some, sets were usually one and done. Had to win the first since in the real world most people gladly quit winner if it had been a hard fight. Had to win the second set to avoid letting the person get even and it was rare somebody two sets down went for three in routine play. Somebody that would hang in for hours playing sets was usually a road player or full time gambler. Talking things you already know but I'm sure many readers don't. There is a rhythm to the gambling dance and it took a few years to learn it.

The small time hustlers would keep stalling while raising the bet. It was funny. I was stalling too but with them letting me win I was building a small pile of their money. In the bars in the sixties or seventies the time to make a move was usually twenty a game, sometimes fifty if I was waving around a fairly thick roll. There would be a slight change in their posture or movements and it was obvious that they had came off the stall. I did too, and the game was on! The funny part, I was playing on their money every inch of the way. I often made a week or so pay without risking a cent of my money other than the first game. I loved to compete with the road players but the local wannabe hustlers were easy money in the bank. I liked to hit balls so I was a grinder by nature.

Jay, dirt tracking is when things get deep! I was spun out in the fourth turn. Could have caught it but first place would have been more like fifth or I might get hung on the steel wall and not cash at all. Instead, I romped on the throttle, steered to tighten the spin instead of come out of it, and finished in first place while spinning a few hundred feet! Anudder time I flew through the air far enough to stand the car on it's nose and the damned thing stood there! The announcer said I had flipped, people came running, finally it fell greasy side down! I finished the race.

You can get out the hip boots anytime I start a story "Me and Bobby". He could get in crap just walking to his mailbox a hundred feet from his house. Anything that included Bobby was an adventure. I saw him run eight racks dead cold. Took him on the road two days later. I don't think I ever saw him string more than two racks again, lifetime! I guess he had incentive when he ran eight racks. We had been pulling wrenches under an eighteen wheeler all day and we were playing partners for a beer each. I had gotten up twice when I had thirteen beers in front of me and hadn't ran a rack.

Hu
That was done in my prime b4 I even knew what the road was. All I played for 3 solid years was straight pool. Had an excellent mentor who, fortunately for me, was a genius of spherical collision and rotation. Prof of mathematics at a local college, and world class champion in another sport involving balls.😂
Done on an 8 footer in his basement tho, so I guess that doesn't count. 😂
I couldn't have been that good bcuz pool didnt pay my way thru college.😉
I dont think I could have stacked up against you Hu. That's hard money. And besides, anonymity is impossible once you jump on that bus.
I was more of a low hanging fruit kinda guy. Didnt wanna work that hard. Got in a bad habit of never playing any harder than I had to.
Hide your speed long enuf, it can be hard to find when you really need it.
Idk why I mentioned this. File it in 13 along with contact points.😂
 
Surprised you haven't.
One in this genre anyway.
You could call it 'Jay's Tall Tales for Short Stacks".😉
Here's my one and only tall tale for a short stack. I once played a guy $5 9-Ball off and on (breaks to rest and to eat) for almost three days. Every time he ran out of money he would leave and come back maybe thirty minutes later with another 50 or a 100. I ended up winning about $300 all told. I was informed later that he had gone out and robbed a local gas station or other small business each time to get more money.
 
Here's my one and only tall tale for a short stack. I once played a guy $5 9-Ball off and on (breaks to rest and to eat) for almost three days. Every time he ran out of money he would leave and come back maybe thirty minutes later with another 50 or a 100. I ended up winning about $300 all told. I was informed later that he had gone out and robbed a local gas station or other small business each time to get more money.
3 days?? 🤦🏻‍♂️ Mr. Stamina!!
Now that's hard won money!!
 
I have been told that many a time by those that were serious. I have gotten ten or fifteen thousand words into a book a few times, it ain't easy!

I can write a pretty solid story off the top of my head so in theory I could write a book of stories. To write a cohesive book I need to put together an outline, tweak it, then flesh it out.

I have known people who have written books, including my mom. It is a lot easier when someone else is doing it. Then there is the question, do I want to write it in Hu's english or proper english? Naturally I favor my own, warts and all. I'm old enough that even if I followed conventions, many of the conventions have changed since I went to school.

There is an old saying, something to the effect that everyone has a book in them and in most cases that is the best place for it to stay!

Hu
I'd be all in for a copy!
 
His last Snakewood cue plays great, that's for sure! I sometimes wonder how many battles he won and what money he earned with it. Maybe a cue like this is fancier than what a typical hustler would use, but surely by the time a hustler earns a well enough reputation, there's little need to fly under the radar anymore. The games tend to find you at that stage.... I took a close forearm pic and it looks like a faint C is etched into the forearm.
 

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3 days?? 🤦🏻‍♂️ Mr. Stamina!!
Now that's hard won money!!
We'd play six or eight hours and take a few hours off, then go at it again. When he went broke he always came back within an hour so I didn't quit him. Must have done that three or four times. I thought he was going home to get more money. He never wanted to raise the bet and I was determined to keep playing him as long as he was handing me money. It was the biggest score I ever made (by far) playing $5 9-Ball. I loved the feeling of having my pockets stuffed with fives, tens and twenties. I felt rich!
 
We'd play six or eight hours and take a few hours off, then go at it again. When he went broke he always came back within an hour so I didn't quit him. Must have done that three or four times. I thought he was going home to get more money. He never wanted to raise the bet and I was determined to keep playing him as long as he was handing me money. It was the biggest score I ever made (by far) playing $5 9-Ball. I loved the feeling of having my pockets stuffed with fives, tens and twenties. I felt rich!
Glutton for punishment.
 
Glutton for punishment.
More back story. When we agreed to take a break I would go out to my car and lay down across the seat and sleep. Someone (usually the house man) would come and knock on my window and tell me he was back. I never went out for a meal but during one break went down to a nearby grocery store and bought a package of baloney and some bread. I lived on those sandwiches for two and half days! I was a determined little shit. I would have kept playing longer if necessary.

Happened at Ye Billiard Den in Hollywood around 1968 or '69. I was 24 years old.
 
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Cole was a great nine ball player because he was a straight shooter and had great control of his cue ball !

If any of you people want to up your game of 9 ball or one pocket game practice 14-1 everyday! If you can pocket balls pretty decent the 14-1 will improve your 9 ball and one pocket game! There’s no other way to up your game quicker!

Running racks and 8 and outs is all about précision. 14-1 is all about precision and it teaches you that! It may be frustrating for awhile but eventually you’ll get it and start putting more than a rack together! You'll also spot your break ball early in the rack and manipulate your shots around that break ball!

When you finally get comfortable at 14-1 you’ll be able to look over the whole rack and know the directions your gonna go to make the whole rack and know where your cue needs to be on the last two balls.

That’s precision pool! I wouldn’t have won the All around without practicing it! There’s no short cuts in becoming a great player or better player! Just do this day after day, month after month, year after year until you join the 100 club and at that point you have graduated!
Well, Howdy! I can't believe it.
I saw you with Cole in Fremont around 1968-69.

Here are a couple of old posts where I talk about you here on AZB forum.
I'm just thrilled to be able to communicate with you after all these years.
Here they are:

Let me add, Keith came in 2nd in one pocket and first in 9 ball. this gave him the all around. I saw Keith once, Cole Dickson came in off the road in Fremont California. He arrived in an old faded VW beetle. It had a large dent in the front right fender. Said they hit a deer somewhere between Houston and Fremont. Yep. Cole was with Keith. I figure Cole was a couple of years older than Keith. So that would have made Keith about 17. this would have been around 1970. Cole had shoulder length straight blond hair and Keith had shoulder length straight brown hair. I Cole was just running balls like they were sitting ducks. He finally cleared the table. Keith was leaning back against the next table behind the foot of the table Cole had been on. His cue was propped up against the table next to him. Cole grabbed the cue ball and set it up against the middle of the rail at the head of the table then grabbed the 8 ball and placed it against the middle of the rail at the foot of the table. Cole says, "Squirrel, make this shot." Keith pushed himself off the table and in one motion swung his arm out and grabbed his cue and again what seemed like one continuous motion proceeded to the head of the table. All very smooth. no hesitation. Graceful. Keith comes around the table and gets down on the rail. He strokes up once and I watched the cue pass over the cue ball on the center of the head rail. then he shout. Mind you this was all one motion from the moment he pushed himself off the pool table he had been leaning on. Smoother than silk the 8 ball on the middle of the foot rail crawled across right along the rail and into the right corner pocket. The cue ball remained on the table. I only saw Keith Thompson shoot that one shot in my entire life. I have a few more things to recall but my laptop battery is going out. Can't even edit this post.
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Come to think about it I can see it now, the dent was in the front left fender. I never forgot that shot but I never knew Keith's name except for Cole calling him "Squirrel." I would ask everyone I met who it might be. They all knew THE Squirrel but this was a kid Cole called Squirrel. Then in Hard Times. Bellflower, I forget exactly how it came down or who told me but finally I found out. Can you believe that at the time I thought about it and added up the years and I had been trying to find out who this Squirrel was: it had been 34 years. That shot to me was so fantastic, not just the shot but the way he attacked it. So smooth confident one-stroke up and in it went. I forget who told me but I remember thanking him repeatedly. What a sensational relief.

There was a tournament at Hard Times and the aluminum bleachers were set up on the raised area where tables and chairs are usually placed for eats and drinks and for watching the big screen TV. I was sitting on a middle step and below me was Jose Parica. He was telling me how to correctly pronounce Dennis Ocollo's name. (I think its spelling has changed over time.) I mentioned Keith's shot. And right away one of the the Filipinos nearby blurted out, "A Filipino can make that shot!"

Let me call this to your attention: when I saw Cole with Keith I was a kid, too. Probably 16 years old. Maybe even the same age as Keith.

I only met one person who claimed to know of Keith Thompson's whereabouts and that was many years ago. I didn't question his veracity but he told me Keith became a preacher.

I've got access to a pool book and there is a picture of Keith. He looks like the seasoned road hustler. Nothing like who I once saw. Mature and grungy and hungry and he is even wearing that brown leather coat. I'll get it and try to post it here.
----------------------------------------------------------------

In the photo of Keith it says it was taken in 1970. I can see that he had definitely matured since when I saw him. I'm sure being very young and on the road can do that to someone. So I would guess that it was 1969 or even possibly 1968 when I saw Cole and Keith at Fremont Family Billiards. And believe me, Cole was at the very top of his game even then. How old would Cole have been at that time? 19? Or 18?!
 

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576 or so balls in rotation? I'll wait for the video. Cool story, though.
Here is a very reasonable scenario: I heard that no one in the San Francisco Bay Area could beat Cole when he was just 16.
How did he get so good at such a young age.
No lack of energy, for sure.
I can easily imagine Cole at 14 or 15 running 96 6-ball racks in a row, with ball in hand after each break.
Just like a kid. In Cole's case, super intense. A freak of nature.
But this is just speculation.
But it would explain the unexplainable.
I had a close high school buddy, John, who told me he used to play golf with Cole.
He said Cole wrapped his golf clubs around a tree because golf was screwing up his pool stroke.
Intense.
 
Well, Howdy! I can't believe it.
I saw you with Cole in Fremont around 1968-69.

Here are a couple of old posts where I talk about you here on AZB forum.
I'm just thrilled to be able to communicate with you after all these years.
Here they are:

Let me add, Keith came in 2nd in one pocket and first in 9 ball. this gave him the all around. I saw Keith once, Cole Dickson came in off the road in Fremont California. He arrived in an old faded VW beetle. It had a large dent in the front right fender. Said they hit a deer somewhere between Houston and Fremont. Yep. Cole was with Keith. I figure Cole was a couple of years older than Keith. So that would have made Keith about 17. this would have been around 1970. Cole had shoulder length straight blond hair and Keith had shoulder length straight brown hair. I Cole was just running balls like they were sitting ducks. He finally cleared the table. Keith was leaning back against the next table behind the foot of the table Cole had been on. His cue was propped up against the table next to him. Cole grabbed the cue ball and set it up against the middle of the rail at the head of the table then grabbed the 8 ball and placed it against the middle of the rail at the foot of the table. Cole says, "Squirrel, make this shot." Keith pushed himself off the table and in one motion swung his arm out and grabbed his cue and again what seemed like one continuous motion proceeded to the head of the table. All very smooth. no hesitation. Graceful. Keith comes around the table and gets down on the rail. He strokes up once and I watched the cue pass over the cue ball on the center of the head rail. then he shout. Mind you this was all one motion from the moment he pushed himself off the pool table he had been leaning on. Smoother than silk the 8 ball on the middle of the foot rail crawled across right along the rail and into the right corner pocket. The cue ball remained on the table. I only saw Keith Thompson shoot that one shot in my entire life. I have a few more things to recall but my laptop battery is going out. Can't even edit this post.
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Come to think about it I can see it now, the dent was in the front left fender. I never forgot that shot but I never knew Keith's name except for Cole calling him "Squirrel." I would ask everyone I met who it might be. They all knew THE Squirrel but this was a kid Cole called Squirrel. Then in Hard Times. Bellflower, I forget exactly how it came down or who told me but finally I found out. Can you believe that at the time I thought about it and added up the years and I had been trying to find out who this Squirrel was: it had been 34 years. That shot to me was so fantastic, not just the shot but the way he attacked it. So smooth confident one-stroke up and in it went. I forget who told me but I remember thanking him repeatedly. What a sensational relief.

There was a tournament at Hard Times and the aluminum bleachers were set up on the raised area where tables and chairs are usually placed for eats and drinks and for watching the big screen TV. I was sitting on a middle step and below me was Jose Parica. He was telling me how to correctly pronounce Dennis Ocollo's name. (I think its spelling has changed over time.) I mentioned Keith's shot. And right away one of the the Filipinos nearby blurted out, "A Filipino can make that shot!"

Let me call this to your attention: when I saw Cole with Keith I was a kid, too. Probably 16 years old. Maybe even the same age as Keith.

I only met one person who claimed to know of Keith Thompson's whereabouts and that was many years ago. I didn't question his veracity but he told me Keith became a preacher.

I've got access to a pool book and there is a picture of Keith. He looks like the seasoned road hustler. Nothing like who I once saw. Mature and grungy and hungry and he is even wearing that brown leather coat. I'll get it and try to post it here.
----------------------------------------------------------------

In the photo of Keith it says it was taken in 1970. I can see that he had definitely matured since when I saw him. I'm sure being very young and on the road can do that to someone. So I would guess that it was 1969 or even possibly 1968 when I saw Cole and Keith at Fremont Family Billiards. And believe me, Cole was at the very top of his game even then. How old would Cole have been at that time? 19? Or 18?!
Very cool story. Keith was considered to be the 7 ball under the top players back then. He sure fooled them!
 
Well, Howdy! I can't believe it.
I saw you with Cole in Fremont around 1968-69.

Here are a couple of old posts where I talk about you here on AZB forum.
I'm just thrilled to be able to communicate with you after all these years.
Here they are:

Let me add, Keith came in 2nd in one pocket and first in 9 ball. this gave him the all around. I saw Keith once, Cole Dickson came in off the road in Fremont California. He arrived in an old faded VW beetle. It had a large dent in the front right fender. Said they hit a deer somewhere between Houston and Fremont. Yep. Cole was with Keith. I figure Cole was a couple of years older than Keith. So that would have made Keith about 17. this would have been around 1970. Cole had shoulder length straight blond hair and Keith had shoulder length straight brown hair. I Cole was just running balls like they were sitting ducks. He finally cleared the table. Keith was leaning back against the next table behind the foot of the table Cole had been on. His cue was propped up against the table next to him. Cole grabbed the cue ball and set it up against the middle of the rail at the head of the table then grabbed the 8 ball and placed it against the middle of the rail at the foot of the table. Cole says, "Squirrel, make this shot." Keith pushed himself off the table and in one motion swung his arm out and grabbed his cue and again what seemed like one continuous motion proceeded to the head of the table. All very smooth. no hesitation. Graceful. Keith comes around the table and gets down on the rail. He strokes up once and I watched the cue pass over the cue ball on the center of the head rail. then he shout. Mind you this was all one motion from the moment he pushed himself off the pool table he had been leaning on. Smoother than silk the 8 ball on the middle of the foot rail crawled across right along the rail and into the right corner pocket. The cue ball remained on the table. I only saw Keith Thompson shoot that one shot in my entire life. I have a few more things to recall but my laptop battery is going out. Can't even edit this post.
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Come to think about it I can see it now, the dent was in the front left fender. I never forgot that shot but I never knew Keith's name except for Cole calling him "Squirrel." I would ask everyone I met who it might be. They all knew THE Squirrel but this was a kid Cole called Squirrel. Then in Hard Times. Bellflower, I forget exactly how it came down or who told me but finally I found out. Can you believe that at the time I thought about it and added up the years and I had been trying to find out who this Squirrel was: it had been 34 years. That shot to me was so fantastic, not just the shot but the way he attacked it. So smooth confident one-stroke up and in it went. I forget who told me but I remember thanking him repeatedly. What a sensational relief.

There was a tournament at Hard Times and the aluminum bleachers were set up on the raised area where tables and chairs are usually placed for eats and drinks and for watching the big screen TV. I was sitting on a middle step and below me was Jose Parica. He was telling me how to correctly pronounce Dennis Ocollo's name. (I think its spelling has changed over time.) I mentioned Keith's shot. And right away one of the the Filipinos nearby blurted out, "A Filipino can make that shot!"

Let me call this to your attention: when I saw Cole with Keith I was a kid, too. Probably 16 years old. Maybe even the same age as Keith.

I only met one person who claimed to know of Keith Thompson's whereabouts and that was many years ago. I didn't question his veracity but he told me Keith became a preacher.

I've got access to a pool book and there is a picture of Keith. He looks like the seasoned road hustler. Nothing like who I once saw. Mature and grungy and hungry and he is even wearing that brown leather coat. I'll get it and try to post it here.
----------------------------------------------------------------

In the photo of Keith it says it was taken in 1970. I can see that he had definitely matured since when I saw him. I'm sure being very young and on the road can do that to someone. So I would guess that it was 1969 or even possibly 1968 when I saw Cole and Keith at Fremont Family Billiards. And believe me, Cole was at the very top of his game even then. How old would Cole have been at that time? 19? Or 18?!
I just saw Keith Thompson's self-introduction on the, New Here? - Introduce Yourself page on AZB forum.
It is dated May 24, 2022.
He says, "Just turned 70 this past weekend. Left home before my fifteenth birthday and raised myself in pools rooms until 18.5 yrs old."
So I calculate he was born in May 1952?
That would make him just 14 months older than me.
So when I saw him with Cole it was definitely before he won at Johnston City.
Cole was born Nov. 1950.
So I think think I was probably 15 when I started going into Fremont Family Billiards on a regular basis.
So that would have been 1968.
I would have been a sophomore in high school.
So it must have been 1969 when I first saw Keith with Cole.
So I first began seeing Cole in 1968.
So Cole would have been 18.
And he was already a well seasoned world class pool player, road player, hustler.
Damn, he was something. Just beautiful to watch.
And he had it down. His personality was already perfected by then, too.
So when Cole came to Fremont with Keith, Cole would have been 19, Keith 17, and me 16.
What a trip just thinking about it. Remembering.
 
In the book, Playing Off the Rail, it mentions Cole went to prison for cheating a casino, didn't it? Nevada State Pen.
Not sure of the incarceration details. His story went to there was a certain floor in a certain casino that could disappear you. 🤷‍♂️ just a rumor.shrug. I concluded wellthe baccarat take down was mostlikely a hide of revenue. One person blocked the camera another swapped the decks in the shoe. Cole showed me the grip that 6 decks required one of which was theirs. Pretty bold move if otherwise.shrug.
 
Okay a cold finger morning so I am back with more Coal.
In 85? Reno Sands tournament. I seated myself behind Efren's money handlers with two large briefcase.
Cole approaches in the walkway around the arena. Efren was up against Ed Kelly next. Cole says, "I will bet a thousand that Ed gets to 7." The reply was, "you bet one thousand, Ed get 8 for 1 you bet 2 Ed get to 7." Cole pivoted with phone to ear and returned minutes later okay to 2 Ed gets to 7." "Yes" was the flavor of the conversation at the race 2 nine 9⃣ ball..
Ed was the only player to get to 7 against Efren.
 
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Okay a cold finger morning so I am back with more Coal.
In 85? Reno Sands tournament. I seated myself behind Efren's money handlers with two large briefcase.
Cole approaches in the walkway around the arena. Efren was up against Ed Kelly next. Cole says, "I will bet a thousand that Ed gets to 7." The reply was, "you bet one thousand, Ed get 8 for 1 you bet 2 Ed get to 7." Cole pivoted with phone to ear and returned minutes later okay to 2 Ed gets to 7." "Yes" was the flavor of the conversation at the race 2 nine 9⃣ ball..
Ed was the only player to get to 7 against Efren.
I didn't see any cell phones in 1985.
 
things to add:

the cell phone in 1985 were the size of a military walkie talkie. and it cost a couple dollars a minute to talk and batteries ran out quickly.
the phone cost about 4000 bucks and got a half hour before the battery died.

there were 4 that i know of good pool players that gambled called squirrel

cole went to jail because one of his long time friends and guy who was in with him talked to save his own ass otherwise they probably might have gotten no time. he then got unlucky and got shot driving a cab in vegas. bad karma.
 
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