According to the Bleacher Report, billiards has a mere two hot athletes of all time out of the top 100. Anybody who follows mainstream print media knows who those two "billiard babes" are.
What's puzzling to me is that there's about a dozen poker "athletes" included in the Bleacher Report. Poker athlete? What, are you kidding me?
I mean, I can understand pole vaulting, tennis, drag racing, figure skaing, MMA, golf, mountain biking, skiing, wakeboarding, snowboarding, volleyball, boxing, soccer, figure skating, softball, and MMA, but poker? :grin-square:
I realize pocket billiards is on the of the definition of what is considered a sport.
Anyway, here's the one of the two hottest billiard athletes of all time in the article written on August 23, 2010. No surprise here:
You can't tell me you haven't wandered across ESPN2 sometime in the afternoon and stopped when you saw Jeannette Lee playing pool.
When the black widow is bent over studying a shot in her leather pants, it doesn't get much better than that.
All female athletes in the article are scantily dressed depicting their hotness instead of their athletic abilities, IMO.
What's puzzling to me is that there's about a dozen poker "athletes" included in the Bleacher Report. Poker athlete? What, are you kidding me?
I mean, I can understand pole vaulting, tennis, drag racing, figure skaing, MMA, golf, mountain biking, skiing, wakeboarding, snowboarding, volleyball, boxing, soccer, figure skating, softball, and MMA, but poker? :grin-square:
I realize pocket billiards is on the of the definition of what is considered a sport.
Anyway, here's the one of the two hottest billiard athletes of all time in the article written on August 23, 2010. No surprise here:
You can't tell me you haven't wandered across ESPN2 sometime in the afternoon and stopped when you saw Jeannette Lee playing pool.
When the black widow is bent over studying a shot in her leather pants, it doesn't get much better than that.
All female athletes in the article are scantily dressed depicting their hotness instead of their athletic abilities, IMO.