sascha said:
anybody got videos of it ? espicially the finals would be great to see....
I've had a VHS video tape from that, but cannot recall where I've put it as moved a lot last 10yrs or so.
Nothing special though. The production wasn't WC quality, it looked more like two guys playing an exhibition. Okumura did run a 3 or 4 pack though and made some nice shots (one fluke also if my memory serves me right), but there wasn't this tension nor atmosphere, which would be felt through TV also, if it would've been there.
1993 final was much much much better though. The TV-production was far better, and "The Cool Killer" aka. "The Cold Face Killer" aka. "The Cold Faced Murderer", that is Chao Fong-Pang, was in form of the forms.
He murdered Germany's Thomas Hasch without never feeling pity.
They played race-to-seven, best-of-three-sets.
It was 7-1, 7-1, when Chao nodded his head and received applauses and slight head shooking from Hasch.
Seeing that (I was 18 then) changed my view of Pool Billiards completely. I used to admire aggressive, pocketing style players like Strickland and Ortmann then, but Chao's ultimate focus, Grand Master's Chess strategy, pin point accuracy - nearly perfect cue ball control on every shot (with minimal risk taking and with extremely soft touch), really made an impression on me.
People always refer to Strickland or Siegel what it comes to playing in major finals, and they certainly have reasons for that, but we shouldn't forget Chao.
He murdered Hasch then at the WC final 7-1, 7-1, and then seven years later Ismael Paez by the widest score there has been in the WPC final ever.
Unfortunately I couldn't check the result for a fact, but it was 17-5, or 17-8. I never saw that match (unfortuntately), but my friend told me that it was 12-0 already for Chao, and he had played perfect since that moment.
He's truly a killer, probably the deadliest ever, what it comes to single (major) matches and perfect focus and execution.
He should be the bad guy on James Bond movies.