It's an interesting question - why does anyone get into pool. I've asked every regular at my pool hall when and why did they start playing? Pool players in my experience are some of the most interesting people around.
It all started for me ... in the early 1970s. My dad brought home a decent 8-foot table when I was six. I have no idea why. He was a WW2 vet. Maybe he played in the military.
Whatever the case, I was the only one of three boys to take an interest. My dad even bought me a nice two-piece stick with a case at my request. I played a few thousand hours, from 6 to 18, before I went to college.
I remember watching Fats and Willie play, live I think, on ABC's Wide World of Sports with Howard Cosell announcing.
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As a teen, I became a terrific shotmaker. I could make the thinnest cuts. But I never learned much of fundamentals, so my shotmaking had to be good. Still, I was decent enough to beat anyone I played. My older brothers would bring friends over. They would think, this little kid can't beat me. But I did, usually for money (beer money in high school).
I played some in college, but started to lose touch after I got a job and met my future wife. When it came time to buy a house, I had to choose. A house with a sunny yard for gardening. Or a house with a basement big enough for a pool table. I couldn't find a house with both at the price my wife and I wanted to pay.
The house with a garden won out.
Fast forward to the 2010s. We vacationed every year in the Outer Banks with friends. We always got a house with a pool table so the kids could play. Every time I played, I kept thinking: I want a table. My love for the game was resurfacing.
During the pandemic in 2021, I cleared out my cellar and bought a cheap 7-foot table (all I could fit). Did I really want to play pool regularly again? After a few months, the answer was a resounding yes. So I upgraded to a much better 7-foot table.
Somehow I can across some Youtube videos of DrCue. Short 2-minute clips teaching the game. Appetite whetted, I searched out more videos. That led me to Robert Byrne, Jerry Brisesath, Bert Kinister, DraDave, Tor Lowry, Sharivari, Niels Feijin. I spent hundreds of hours watching videos and hundred more doing drills.
Before long, I found myself watching pro matches live on Youtube. That's how I learned about SVB. Then I learned about this guy named Efren that everyone called The Goat. So I started watching matches of Reyes and other old players.
Now here I am. I practice every day for at least an hour - my kids are grown - and I watch a ton of pro pool. Probably more than anyone wanted to know, but there it is.