I went down to Monterey and watched this morning and John had four runs over 100 in four hours but nothing over 140. He was dealing with a sore back.
John is currently playing on a Rebco at Easy Street Billiards in Monterey.
Rebco is a California company formed by Bob Bebb. The table John is playing on is a furniture style table but solid. John's main irritation with it is that the rails are narrow and that makes shots with the cue ball on the cushion harder since your bridge is closer than usual to the cue ball.Bob, how would you describe the table/pockets John is using? Haven't heard of Rebco.
Hi all,
The video is now live in it's entirety on our YouTube channel: https://youtu.be/lf9hRHdA0A8
Thanks for everyone's feedback!
Thanks,
Max
Rebco is a California company formed by Bob Bebb. The table John is playing on is a furniture style table but solid. John's main irritation with it is that the rails are narrow and that makes shots with the cue ball on the cushion harder since your bridge is closer than usual to the cue ball.
The pockets are generous as described before. I didn't measure them but I'd guess 5 inches. The neighboring table appears to have pockets around 4 inches or maybe a little smaller.
The cloth is slow, which John attributes to moisture. The room is not far from a fairly large ocean. And there's fog this time of year. The table seems level.
I think I figured out what the problem was. See the threads in the main forum.tHAT CUEBALL TOOK AN EPIC MASSE !!!
I think I figured out what the problem was. See the threads in the main forum.
I just read that there may have been a piece of chalk or something on the cloth that caused the CB to change course like that. Makes a lot more sense than the table being badly out of level in that corner.
Does this mean that we are now going to see not only the cleaning of the cue ball, but table sweeping and vacuuming between racks?!!
I've watched the video a few times, normally when the cue hits chalk or some other debris it will quickly change course, his cue did not do that, it was a gradual change in direction. I think the table is just off. Whenever that happens to me I'll slow roll the ball in the general area to see which way it rolls, sure wish they would've done that so we could all see if the table is/was off.
Maybe I'm just too picky about the equipment I play on and with, but I can't possibly imagine that with the days and hours and effort John spent going after this record, as well as the trouble of video taping every attempt, that he would not be doing it on a table that had been recently checked and made perfectly level as possible, and that he wouldn't have been using virtually new balls, particularly the cue ball.I've watched the video a few times, normally when the cue hits chalk or some other debris it will quickly change course, his cue did not do that, it was a gradual change in direction. I think the table is just off. Whenever that happens to me I'll slow roll the ball in the general area to see which way it rolls, sure wish they would've done that so we could all see if the table is/was off.
Maybe I'm just too picky about the equipment I play on and with, but I can't possibly imagine that with the days and hours and effort John spent going after this record, as well as the trouble of video taping every attempt, that he would not be doing it on a table that had been recently checked and made perfectly level as possible, and that he wouldn't have been using virtually new balls, particularly the cue ball.
It appeared the curve was very gradual all the way until the final 6-12 inches when it turned even more. When the cue ball initially started drawing back, it was headed more than 1 diamond from the corner pocket, when it passed by the side pockets, it was headed just inside the first diamond, when it passed the headstring it was headed at least 1/2 diamond from the corner pocket, then it took the fatal and most severe path/curve in the final 6"-12" - very strange. Normally a ball spinning like a top down the table at a slow speed will still head in a fairly straight line, which makes what happened here so unusual and unfortunate for John - Almost like the ghost of Willie put a spell on the cue ball to scratch!I agree with this, and I also think it unlikely that a measle was high or low and the highness or lowness somehow exaggerated the curving path of the cue ball. I would look to Dr. Dave to tell us which of these measle positions, if either, would have that effect (without having caused any other adverse effect during a two hour run of over 400 balls). I’d be inclined to place weight on what John reported. He was there. He reacted immediately in a way that tells us that the path of the CB was not normal. The player knows.