gopi-1 said:Here's some more results coming in JAM:
Darren Appleton - 11, Naef Al Jaweeni - 3
Roberto Gomez - 11, Vilmos Foldez - 3
Ralf Souquet - 11, Efren Reyes - 7
Alex Pagulayan - 11, Wu Chia Ching - 10
Shane Van Boening - 11, Gandy Valle - 10
Radoslaw Babica - 11, Thorsten Hohmann - 8
Krisz said:Marlon Manalo PHI 8 - Thomas Engert GER 11
Chang Jung Ling TPE 8 - Martin Kempter AUT 11
Mika Immonen FIN 6 - Jeffrey De Luna PHI 11
Lee Van Corteza PHI 9 - Ohi Naoyuki JPN 11
Zhang Shuchun CHN 6 - Ko Pin Yi TPE 11
Niels Feijen NED 11 - Allan Cuartero PHI 3
Well, I've seen Django, Souquet and Engert play in person and from what I hear, the others can play a bit, too...:wink:jay helfert said:Look out for Ko Pin Yi. He's scary good. Of course, so is everyone else in this field.![]()
Krisz said:So the last 16 are:
Dennis Orcollo - Warren Kiamco
Ramil Gallego - Francisco Bustamante
Darren Appleton - Ralf Souquet
Alex Pagulayan - Roberto Gomez
Shane Van Boening - Radoslaw Babica
Thomas Engert -Martin Kempter
Jeffrey De Luna - Ohi Naoyuki
Ko Pin Yi - Niels Feijen
7 Philipinos, 3 will advance for sure
1 Brit
2 Germans
1 Polish (is it the right term?)
1 Austrian
1 Dutch
makes a total of 6 Europeans
1 American
1 Japanese
1 Taiwanese
I'd go for Warren, Ramil and maybe Roberto...the rest, I agreejay helfert said:Try picking the winners of these eight matches. Good luck. I'll take Dennis, Francisco, Ralf, Alex, Shane, Thomas, De Luna and Ko. If I get more than half right I'll be happy.
JAM said:Both Shane and Johnny do have some financial backing here in the States, and they are fortunate indeed for that.
I am not sure what the arrangement it is, but both of them are provided some monies for travel expenses. I do not know if their financial backing covers 100 percent of all expenses. Something, though, is sure better than nothing. The majority of American players have zero financial backing. Johnny and Shane, in some sense, are lucky in that respect.
Shane may be able to hang in the Philippines, as he's single. However, Johnny has a wife and two children, as well as a pool room he co-owns in Marietta, Georgia.
I was told by someone in the know that it costs about $3,500 to attend a week-long event in Qatar. That's a lot of cheesenips for most American players to come up with. It sounds like a wonderful tournament, however. But $3,500 can go a lot further by attending tournaments on American soil, if you're an American player.
JAM
gopi-1 said:Fresh from the oven:
Dennis Orcullo -11, Oliver Ortmann - 6
Warren Kiamco - 11, Ronnie Alcano - 7
Ramil Gallego - 11, Satoshi Kawabata - 7
Francisco Bustamante - 11, Antonio Gabica - 2
Two Filipinos just dropped like flies!![]()
fanthom said:Damn! It's beginning to look like a Philippine Civil War in the Middle East :grin-square: Only thing missing is Manny Pacquiao and the rumble is complete.
Hey, you deciphered it! The prize money is enough for Filipinos because they eventually end up spending the bulk of it here. To an American or ....player, it's not enough because of the cost of living in their countries. The "will" part might just have these American and Euro and...gladiators end up living in the Philippines to make ends meet easier while honing their skill.:smile:JAM said:I find this statement kind of funny, thinking about that infamous Filipino Invasion, led by Jose Parica, followed by Cesar Morales, and then Santos, Ronnie Alcano, et cetera. The U.S. monies seemed to be attractive at one time to the Filipino players. :grin:
Some Filipinos today do enjoy accepting backing from a U.S. Open champion who's currently living in Philadelphia area. Every time I would see him at tournaments, he was surrounded by Filipino champions.
Where there's a will, there's a way, I say! It's the "will" part that troubles me personally today.![]()
JAM
bandido said:Hey, you deciphered it! The prize money is enough for Filipinos because they eventually end up spending the bulk of it here. To an American or ....player, it's not enough because of the cost of living in their countries. The "will" part might just have these American and Euro and...gladiators end up living in the Philippines to make ends meet easier while honing their skill.:smile:
The Philippines is a poolplayer's paradise. Not just because of all the champions it has but the Philippines as a whole is a fertile environment for the sport to grow in.
Give me a holler and I'll help you make your move a bit easier. Come for a vacation first and live the islands.Fatboy said:I think it would be GREAT to live in the PI for a few years. I might just do that-I'm kinda needing a change.
bandido said:Hey, you deciphered it! The prize money is enough for Filipinos because they eventually end up spending the bulk of it here. To an American or ....player, it's not enough because of the cost of living in their countries. The "will" part might just have these American and Euro and...gladiators end up living in the Philippines to make ends meet easier while honing their skill.:smile:
The Philippines is a poolplayer's paradise. Not just because of all the champions it has but the Philippines as a whole is a fertile environment for the sport to grow in.
Krisz said:PHI Dennis Orcollo VS PHI Warren Kiamco 11-6
PHI Ramil Gallego VS PHI Francisco Bustamante 11-8
PHI Alex Pagulayan VS PHI Roberto Gomez 11-6