World Pool Championships 2025, July 21-26, Jeddah

.... Now we know who Ameer Ali is, and he is a highly skilled player. ...
I watched part of one of his matches. He did play very well at times, but he also shot one or two shots that looked wild, as in out of control. I see he is going to be on Table 1 tomorrow against Anton Raga.

14:00h #49 / W#57 T1 Fedor Gorst vs Mario He
14:00h #50 / W#57 T2 Duong Quoc Hoang vs Jefrey Roda

16:00h #51 / W#58 T1 Anton Raga vs Ameer Ali
16:00h #52 / W#58 T4 Konrad Juszczyszyn vs Kledio Kaci

16:00h #53 / W#59 T2 Francisco Sánchez Ruiz vs Casper Matikainen
16:00h #54 / W#59 T3 Bernie Regalario vs Patric Gonzales

14:00h #55 / W#60 T3 Ko Ping Chung vs James Aranas
14:00h #56 / W#60 T4 Carlo Biado vs Jeffrey Ignacio

14:00 = 7AM EDT
16:00 = 9AM EDT
 
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You must be thinkin’ of someone else. I didn’t hear the Tetris theme song playing for his walk out music.
He might be an American now, but he is FROM Russia. He will always be from Russia.
Russia and the European pool scene made him the player he is, not the American pool scene.
 
I actually trolled Casper hard when he came our Open tournament(because i still could..)

Said : " congratz your European 9-ball Championship win! Maybe some day you can beat me too😂😂"

Because last time before European Champs i beat him on quarter finals Boeing 4-7 down and then i played perfect and won 9-8..
By Poolmanis's writing (like "Boeing" instead of "being" and so on, lol) one can see he is already drunk celebrating, because he's happy for Casper :LOL:
 
Russia and the European pool scene made him the player he is, not the American pool scene.
That's actually not true. No doubt, his incredible fundamentals were developed in Russia, but as recently as four years ago, his tactical play left a lot to be desired. It was not until he competed regularly in America that he developed into an elite defensive and tactical player. I would also add that taking up one pocket, a game played chiefly in America, had a lot to do with the growth of his tactical skills, especially his speed control.
 
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He might be an American now, but he is FROM Russia. He will always be from Russia.
Russia and the European pool scene made him the player he is, not the American pool scene.
moreover, FG will be an American in future, and now he is not yet ;) But too few try to get this down. Kudos to Matchroom
 
That's actually not true. No doubt, his incredible fundamentals were developed in Russia, but as recently as four years ago, his tactical play left a lot to be desired. It was not until he competed regularly in America that he developed into an elite defensive and tactical player. I would also add that taking up one pocket, a game played chiefly in America, had a lot to do with the growth of his tactical skills, especially his speed control.
Dear Stu. There is one (and the only) man standing behind Fedor's success (apart from himself being such a hardworking player and striving to be an athlete). His name is Johan Ruysink. He is a European.
 
Lots of "audible clock" problems in the Gorst-Lechner match. The ref failed to call 10 on Gorst and then called 5 with no time to prepare.

They need a visible indicator very badly, like a bar of lights that goes green-yellow-red like is used in other events.
When play was paused at main table and the camera was wandering around other tables in play, at least one table flashed a device you are talking about. The digital shotclock, and the ref was basically pushing the button to start the countdown. The only thing it is missing I guess is any sort of a notification.

(Jeezuz, how hard is that?! We run a local ring game regularly, and use a speaker connected to a smartphone with an app, fully adjustable to our needs. One of the settings we get is a 10 sec vocal warning)
 
Dear Stu. There is one (and the only) man standing behind Fedor's success (apart from himself being such a hardworking player and striving to be an athlete). His name is Johan Ruysink. He is a European.
Yes, for stroke fundamentals. Not even close to accurate for his defensive and tactical skills.
 
Lot of disappointments: Ouschan, Filler and Ko the biggest, but Kaci, SVB, Chua also played below par.

I think of it more as, other players stepped up. The favorites felt the pressure, no doubt. Lots of players did, even those who won. Roda I’ve seen with the yips before. Great game he has when he doesn’t feel the nerves.

Casper was fun to watch. SVB really should have beaten him, but the Finn played with confidence and abandon. He figured, why not, and didn’t overthink things. His break has been working and he really smashes the ball.

I think Fedor — my favorite Russian who’s becoming more and more American — is the favorite at this point. But Chung is picking it up, Biado has been clutch and FSR has found his second gear.

Darkhorses? Raga is very clever and, I did not see this coming, Aranas is playing without nerves. He always gets nervous.

I don’t consider Duong a dark horse. He is an in be tweener. His game has gotten so much better since he became a regular on the WNT tour. If Fedor doesn’t win, I hope Duong does. He is a lifelong pool sufferer, if you know what that means.
 
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