They filled-up the qualifiers for sure. Its is their back yard so its not surprising.Based on the names, i dont think there is one mid-east guy left though they dominated the field in numbers :smile:
They filled-up the qualifiers for sure. Its is their back yard so its not surprising.Based on the names, i dont think there is one mid-east guy left though they dominated the field in numbers :smile:
Based on the names, i dont think there is one mid-east guy left though they dominated the field in numbers :smile:
Being here in Kiev I can't say that much about the equipment and so on. I've watched Joshua vs Casper match from 4:3 Filler. Yes, at that rack he missed one of the easiest 8-ball I've seen from him the last years. It did look like something wrong happened ...it appeared to become a turning point in the match. Casper capitalized on every mistake Josh did and had better rolls after his breaks when Josh did not look like I used to see him. I knew him as trying to stay positive till the very end whatever happens in the match. It was not the case this time and at the end Casper deserved that win.It isn't tough. The equipment makes it just "A FLIP A COIN" for these calibre players man.
Appleton beat Kaci 11-6. Daz looks dangerous again.
Are they still playing or is it a scoreboard error?
I'm seeing last 32 , little ko up 8-7.
... Filler ... He must be missing his wife Pia who is not here ...
Yes, it was a nefarious WPA scheme -- schedule overlapping men's and women's 9-Ball championships 6,000 miles apart to split up the KillerFillers. Well, it worked. Joshua didn't win. I predict Pia doesn't either.
[maybe Joshua can fly to China quickly to help]
Wow Joshua got eliminated early. So it's only Earl who was able to defend his W9B title. Carlo Biado almost did it two years ago.
Wow, looks like I snoozed the first few days of this event while I was out of town visiting a friend in Connecticut.
With 32 left, I can see that of the five guys we, at AZB, tend to view as the five best players in the world (in no particular order, JL Chang, Josh Filler, Shane Van Boening, Wu Jiaqing and Jayson Shaw), only JL Chang remains, so the stage is set for a Cinderella run here. Of course, there are plenty of very fine players left, so snapping this title off won't be easy.
To have spent two full days to reduce the field from 96 to 64 seems a bit ridiculous to this fan, but at least now the tournament has some momentum.
Good luck to the 32 fine players still vying for the title. May the best man win.
In these times in which widespread elite pool is played on at least three continents, it's so difficult to win even one world nine ball championship today that I really wonder whether anyone will ever win two in a row. If so, it will be an accomplishment for the ages.
Bizarre. Those ranked 33 to 96 have to start in middle and play Round 1 . But if you win, you have to win one more against the top 32 seeds or if you lose you have to win one more on losers side. So if you win round 1, you have to win 2 to qualify for last 64. On other hand, if you lose Round 1, you just have to win one on losers side to qualify.That was a weird qualifying segment. The players who got a bye only had to win one match (winner or loser side) to make the final 64. They might as well have just played DE until there were sixteen left on the winners side and sixteen on the losers side and let the final 32 play SE.
That was a weird qualifying segment. The players who got a bye only had to win one match (winner or loser side) to make the final 64. They might as well have just played DE until there were sixteen left on the winners side and sixteen on the losers side and let the final 32 play SE. It wouldn't have taken any longer and been far more definitive. Notice the first round losers (round of 64) receive only $500 and the final 32 are guaranteed $2,000. A pretty big rift there. If they had done it the way I just suggested the players finishing 33-48 could have each received $1,000. That makes more sense to me. Half the field is still in the money and a thousand looks and feels a lot better than a measly five bills.
... In other words, you are “rewarded” if you lose Round 1 cos then only need to win one and play less matches and also play weaker players on losers side.![]()
Being here in Kiev I can't say that much about the equipment and so on. I've watched Joshua vs Casper match from 4:3 Filler. Yes, at that rack he missed one of the easiest 8-ball I've seen from him the last years. It did look like something wrong happened ...it appeared to become a turning point in the match. Casper capitalized on every mistake Josh did and had better rolls after his breaks when Josh did not look like I used to see him. I knew him as trying to stay positive till the very end whatever happens in the match. It was not the case this time and at the end Casper deserved that win.
I don't like to discuss how good or bad the equipment is because it is useless whatever it is just the same for everybody and usually the better players are those who adapt better too. Why complain about something you can't change. You either try to overcome it or give up and go home. That's it.
I've always said the mark of a true champion is one who can overcome the obstacles, to include equipment.
Seasoned players adjust fast to new equipment. Young'ns are used to certain brands and can't adjust fast enough in a tournament setting, no matter how good their pool-playing skills are.
That said, every champion has a streak of greatness, some longer than others. In USA, Earl's streak of greatness lasted decades. Kaci and Filler are the new kids on the block, Europe's young guns, and it will be interesting to see how long they can stay on top.
I overheard Keith telling somebody yesterday on the phone that Shane is a great player, but if you were to take away his break, he may not hold up as well as he does in those long challenge matches. Keith was referring to gambling, though, not tournaments. The alternate-break setting for Shane isn't good for him.
I used to be a huge fan of Kaci, still am, but in my most humble opinion, I think the distractions of being a pool celebrity may have tarnished his armor.
As far as Joshua Filler, everybody loses now and then. You can't win them all. Let's see how he does next time around, with or without Pia. The two of them together do seem to provide strength and comfort to them on the road, and rightly so.