A funny Story I thought I'd share

Boogie

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
I was working the Bar one night (This one Hall I worked at had the balls behide the Bar) and this couple walked in asking for a table. So the girl asked me if I had a "tri-angle thingie"...but before I had a chance to reply....the guys says in his manlyest voice..."I know what I'm doing, I play all the time".
So, I put them on a close table (naturally, cuz the girl was cute ;) ) plus I wanted to see how good this guy played. As I watched her man put the balls on the table.....much to my surprise.....he turns the plastic ball tray over and racks with it !!!!!!! I laughed my ass off for a good 45 minutes till he finally noticed he was the only dualt doing it....What a TOOL!!!!!
Well, when they were leaving I said to the guy with a smile "You know, it's the strangest thing, ever since I but in those tri-angle wood thingies, people haven't been able to stop useing them."
 
Boogie,

Tom in Cincy once compiled a list of "flares".

enjoy...
**************************

FLARES

A few years ago there was a long discussion on R.S.B. concerning flares.

Flares are those things that players do that tell everyone in the pool hall that they cannot play a lick.

This is a collection of responses:

1. The "tank turret" rack, where the 8-ball is placed on top of the rack and allowed to drop in the hole when racking.

2. The stick twirl, a la Tom Cruise.

3. Calling 8-ball "solids and stripes."

4. How about bridging between the knuckles of the first two fingers? --

5. Let me preface this by saying that I have nothing but respect for the game of golf. Moreover, many golfers are fine pool players. Still, the flare that I like the most is the one I call the "drunken golfer". This is the guy who is with several of his buddies, all of whom have tan
Dockers with big asses, sport shirts with paunches, big red noses, and a penchant for screaming... "Get in there!" and "Get there!! Getthere!!" Sharking among them is not only tolerated, but expected, and the most common method of annoying the shark seems to be self-medication to the point of catatonia. These guys all have eye/hand co-ordination
greater than the average Joe, but none of them seem to be able to actually play.

6. The aggressive chalker (spins cue into chalk cube with such vigor that I expect a fire to break out), the stick dropper, and the guy who gets annoyed with ball-in-hand fouls ("that's for wimps!").

7. Don't forget the guy that screams "dirty pool" when you play a safety.

8. Moving the cue ball a butt diameter away from the cushion (ala miniature golf); this is one of my favorites because I learned this when I first played.

9. In addition to the "stick twirl, there is also the "rack twirl". Especially when they hit themselves in the face or drop it on the freshly racked balls.

10. The stilt bridge (fingertips down, hand up off the table for no good reason).

11. Walking around the 9ft table a couple of times, and then asking where to put the quarters.

12. Playing on eight foot tables when there are nine footers available.

13. Keeping their bankroll in their wallet.

14. Standing close to the table while the other player is playing. Could be ignorance, could be a shark.

15. Bragging about how good they are. The dangerous players tell you they have bad backs, haven't played for a month, can't make a ball, just got over the flu, etc.

16. Playing eight ball could be a flare, could be a come on.

17. Missing a long shot (that you estimate they make maybe one out of three times) and then standing for several seconds completely frozen in place displaying a look of utter disbelief that borders on absolute shock.

18. Watching them line up their shot. Right before they shoot, you can tell they're going to miss by a mile.

19. Or, they lay their cue all over the table trying to figure out the angles, and the places the ball will hit after they go 14 rails for their shot.(this usually results in about 5 balls being knocked around).

20. Another good one is, when they get snookered, and can't get a shot on they're next ball, they just hit the $hit out of the cue ball, and if something does happen to fall, they step up to shoot again, no matter what ball they hit first.

21. The "ball" bridge (holding on to a ball to make a bridge).

22. I like the one where the guy or gal racks 8-ball. They spend 15 minutes trying to get the solids/stripes in perfectly alternating order. Is this a rule somewhere?

23. How about the player who vigorously shakes the rack back and forth hoping the balls will settle into a tight rack.

24. And don't forget the guy that thinks the Sardo tight rack is "probably a good thing."

25. And let's not forget the guys that grab a house cue and roll it all over the table to check straightness like it's gonna hamper *their* game if it's not exactly on. And they never even look at the tip, the most important part.

26. Or the player who jacks the butt of his cue on every shot so that the cue is about a 45-degree angle with the table and shoots every shot at warp speed.

27. Slamming the stick against the rail on every missed shot?

28. Budweiser cue. Or better, "My buddy sold me this Budweiser cue for only $150 dollars!"

29. "I always shoot better when I'm drunk." is number one!

30. Using 2 lbs of talc, most of it going on top of the table.

31. Chalking up only once, right after he got it off the rack. Once is good for the whole night!

32. Puts beer bottle in the pocket while shooting.

33. Placing the chalk on the ground or against the ceiling when chalking.

34. Jumping by scooping under the cue ball.

35. How about shooting directly at an object ball that's separated from the cueball by several inches, perhaps as much as 8 inches, then following through so far that the cueball goes foreword as fast as the object ball. When you call a foul, he has no clue as to what you're talking about.

36. Alternates back and forth between one eye open and both eyes open, trying to aim the shot 'just right', while swinging the cue in a curved arc nowhere near the line of the shot. Then gives YOU advice on how to play!)

37. The guy that teaches his girlfriend how to make a bridge, of course he's teaching her to put her forefinger on the top of the shaft not around it.

38. The guy that misses the pocket by a mile but sends it 2 more rails into a corner or side and walks away like he meant to do it.

39. "THE CLAW" rail bridge (also known as the "EAGLE TALON" in some states).

40. Don't forget the ever cool method of putting chalk on the ground, inserting cue into the cube and spinning the cue with the inside of foot. Wow! I'm impressed just thinking about it.

41. How about hitting the shaft on the side of the table to knock the chalk residue off after chalking?

42. Smokers who try to hold a cigarette in their mouth when they shoot and they have to hold their head sideways so the smoke won't get in their eyes. Or they set it on the rail where it rolls onto the cloth or the floor.

43. Holding a lit cigarette in grip hand while shooting.

44. Chalk upside down on rail.

45. Sitting on the cushions.

46. Grinding the chalk into the cloth to mark a spot.
 
Wally in Cincy said:
28. Budweiser cue.

What's funny is I have actually thought about getting one of those with a decent shaft and "venturing" out to a new pool hall to bang a few around just to see what happens.....

:p
 
1pRoscoe said:
What's funny is I have actually thought about getting one of those with a decent shaft and "venturing" out to a new pool hall to bang a few around just to see what happens.....

:p

I read a post about how someone got ahold of a budwiser cue and changed out the joint and made a new shaft for it...lol. Talk about a "hustler"!
 
Rackin_Zack said:
I read a post about how someone got ahold of a budwiser cue and changed out the joint and made a new shaft for it...lol. Talk about a "hustler"!
Or a Pamela Anderson cue. :D
 
Rackin_Zack said:
I read a post about how someone got ahold of a budwiser cue and changed out the joint and made a new shaft for it...lol. Talk about a "hustler"!

There's a cuemaker who sold those. He cored out the butt and fitted a good shaft to it. I can't find the link. Maybe Joey in Cali knows where it is.

Nowadays you might want to use the ubiquitous Marlboro cues I see around lately.
 
1pRoscoe said:
What's funny is I have actually thought about getting one of those with a decent shaft and "venturing" out to a new pool hall to bang a few around just to see what happens.....

:p

They'd be all over you for some action. A nice touch is placing NASCAR stickers on the butt. (A proven technique ;) )
 
Hahaha

Funny part is almost everyone who spends a couple years non stop in a pool hall will see all of these things happen... many many times.
I enjoy argueing the bar idiots about ball in hand.
Budwieser?? How about those new cues with the flashing lights in the bottom?
There was a man who came into my hall everyday for 5 hours and practiced set up shots.. mostly straight in, jacking his cue 45 degrees, looking back at his stroking arm every stroke and rattling the ball 80 percent of the time; although he never got frustrated, he just calmly set the shot back up and tried again.
Another man comes in and shoots cross corner one pocket banks over and over, missing over 60 percent of the time; there everyday, banging away...
Worst part is neither of these people would play for money even with the dead a$$ nuts.
Then there are the old guys who are fascinated when you break and run a rack, and tell you they've been playing for 30 years and never done that... in 8-ball or 9-ball.
Oh ya, and the best of all... "Oh you have to use the sissy stick? What are you a girl?" I love playing those people
:p
 
Wally in Cincy said:
There's a cuemaker who sold those. He cored out the butt and fitted a good shaft to it. I can't find the link. Maybe Joey in Cali knows where it is.

Nowadays you might want to use the ubiquitous Marlboro cues I see around lately.

If you come across the link, let me know!

marissayi said:
They'd be all over you for some action. A nice touch is placing NASCAR stickers on the butt. (A proven technique ;) )

I'm seriously thinking about it! :D
 
5aheadforpinks said:
..."Oh you have to use the sissy stick?


I'm one of the few males in my APA league who will not hesitate to use the bridge. I even have one of those Keller bridges I use occasionally if the venue does not have one. You should see the looks that gets :D

Playing 14.1 on a 9-ft. table makes you appreciate the bridge.
 
One other flare that happened at Snookers in Cincinnati,

I was playing in a tournament, waiting for my match when a young couple walks up to the table next to where I was sitting. There is a 3C billiards table between me and the couple.

The girl asks her boyfriend "Look, there aren't any pockets on that table" his reply "yeah.. that's the practice table"

I almost fell out of my chair.
 
The best hook that I've ever seen was a lady walking into a bar with a "Pabst Blue Ribbon" stick and no case...She walked out of the bar carrying $1000 that I know of. She'd had a "little" work done on the cue. I saw her at a different bar the next night and was quite pleased to sit and talk to her for a while...Let's just say that her shaft wasn't the only predator in the bar that night....

I imagine that the "Nascar" stickers would be a good touch.
 
I saw Guido Orlandi make one at the APA nationals one year. A cue with clear plastic and flaoting balls in some kind of liquid in the butt. Priceless!
 
LOL! That is too funny.

One time a bunch of us were playing when in comes in 2 guys. One of them was carrying a case and he walked in proudly--you know the kind, like he's got his own case and cues so he just knows what he's doing. Sigh. Naturally, we stopped to watch him to see if he knew what he was doing. He was probably about 3 tables away from us. He took out his cue, a visible Cue-Tech cue, and before shooting, he whipped out some sand paper (grit unknown), and proceeded in swiping down his cue. Now remember, this was a cutech which is fiberglass. This dude sand papered the color right off the cue and on the pooltable were the speckles of color that fell off the cue. We laughed for days on that one but hey, imitation is the best form of flattery, eh? He must've seen someone, maybe one of us, doing the same with our cues.

Another time, and this guy plays regularly on a local tournament night, who thinks he is the shiznit, decided that one night he was going to wear a Sir Joseph glove. Yeah. Well first he wore it on his grip hand and before anyone would notice, I told him that he was wearing it on the wrong hand. He then put it on his bridge hand, where it belongs, but somehow managed to slip it through his pinky, ring, and middle finger so that when he stroked his cue, the cue was still rubbing on his index finger (where the glove shoud've been) which defeated the purpose. I gave up then!
 
1pRoscoe said:
If you come across the link, let me know!



I'm seriously thinking about it! :D
DZ used to have it in his site.
Judd made one too years ago.
 
Last edited:
9 Ball Girl said:
He took out his cue, a visible Cue-Tech cue, and before shooting, he whipped out some sand paper (grit unknown), and proceeded in swiping down his cue. Now remember, this was a cutech which is fiberglass. This dude sand papered the color right off the cue and on the pooltable were the speckles of color that fell off the cue.


You just reminded me about a call I got several years ago right about when Cuetec first came out.....

...ring-ring

"Good Afternoon, New York Billiards"

"Yeah how you doin, I just got a new cue and it feels alittle sticky for my hands. Is there anything I can do to fix it?"

"Sure. You can use some baby powder you might have around the house......OR....if you have some fine grit sandpaper....very important...nothing courser then 600 though.... you can give it a quick run up and down your shaft...and don't forget to spin the shaft ass you do it."

"Cool, my dad has some sandpaper....I'll do that....thanks."


...and I go about my day.

Next day this kid comes in with a case and says to me...

"Hi, I called yesterday and the guy on the phone said I could use some sandpaper on my cue."

"He did? Well, you sure can, but you need to be really careful about that"

"Yeah, I was, but it didnt work for me"

"It didnt ??? Let me have a look at it....I'm sure I'll be able to clean it up for ya"

.......so he turns his case upside down to pull out his cue (which he had joint down) so the butt of the cue comes out and the label reads "Cue-Tec".....my mouth dropped.....he then pulls out this shaft that was octagon shaped (like a pencil) as you turned the cue you saw green/wood/green/wood ect-ect.........So I looked at him and said....

"Oh man, there's your problem, you never spon the cue when you sanded it, You're gunna need a new shaft"

he says........

"I knew I screwed up, I'll go back to the store and buy a new one, thanks again for all your help"



....Poor kid!!!
 
Wally in Cincy said:
Boogie,

Tom in Cincy once compiled a list of "flares".

enjoy...
**************************

FLARES

A few years ago there was a long discussion on R.S.B. concerning flares.

Flares are those things that players do that tell everyone in the pool hall that they cannot play a lick.

This is a collection of responses:

1. The "tank turret" rack, where the 8-ball is placed on top of the rack and allowed to drop in the hole when racking.

2. The stick twirl, a la Tom Cruise.

3. Calling 8-ball "solids and stripes."

4. How about bridging between the knuckles of the first two fingers? --

5. Let me preface this by saying that I have nothing but respect for the game of golf. Moreover, many golfers are fine pool players. Still, the flare that I like the most is the one I call the "drunken golfer". This is the guy who is with several of his buddies, all of whom have tan
Dockers with big asses, sport shirts with paunches, big red noses, and a penchant for screaming... "Get in there!" and "Get there!! Getthere!!" Sharking among them is not only tolerated, but expected, and the most common method of annoying the shark seems to be self-medication to the point of catatonia. These guys all have eye/hand co-ordination
greater than the average Joe, but none of them seem to be able to actually play.

6. The aggressive chalker (spins cue into chalk cube with such vigor that I expect a fire to break out), the stick dropper, and the guy who gets annoyed with ball-in-hand fouls ("that's for wimps!").

7. Don't forget the guy that screams "dirty pool" when you play a safety.

8. Moving the cue ball a butt diameter away from the cushion (ala miniature golf); this is one of my favorites because I learned this when I first played.

9. In addition to the "stick twirl, there is also the "rack twirl". Especially when they hit themselves in the face or drop it on the freshly racked balls.

10. The stilt bridge (fingertips down, hand up off the table for no good reason).

11. Walking around the 9ft table a couple of times, and then asking where to put the quarters.

12. Playing on eight foot tables when there are nine footers available.

13. Keeping their bankroll in their wallet.

14. Standing close to the table while the other player is playing. Could be ignorance, could be a shark.

15. Bragging about how good they are. The dangerous players tell you they have bad backs, haven't played for a month, can't make a ball, just got over the flu, etc.

16. Playing eight ball could be a flare, could be a come on.

17. Missing a long shot (that you estimate they make maybe one out of three times) and then standing for several seconds completely frozen in place displaying a look of utter disbelief that borders on absolute shock.

18. Watching them line up their shot. Right before they shoot, you can tell they're going to miss by a mile.

19. Or, they lay their cue all over the table trying to figure out the angles, and the places the ball will hit after they go 14 rails for their shot.(this usually results in about 5 balls being knocked around).

20. Another good one is, when they get snookered, and can't get a shot on they're next ball, they just hit the $hit out of the cue ball, and if something does happen to fall, they step up to shoot again, no matter what ball they hit first.

21. The "ball" bridge (holding on to a ball to make a bridge).

22. I like the one where the guy or gal racks 8-ball. They spend 15 minutes trying to get the solids/stripes in perfectly alternating order. Is this a rule somewhere?

23. How about the player who vigorously shakes the rack back and forth hoping the balls will settle into a tight rack.

24. And don't forget the guy that thinks the Sardo tight rack is "probably a good thing."

25. And let's not forget the guys that grab a house cue and roll it all over the table to check straightness like it's gonna hamper *their* game if it's not exactly on. And they never even look at the tip, the most important part.

26. Or the player who jacks the butt of his cue on every shot so that the cue is about a 45-degree angle with the table and shoots every shot at warp speed.

27. Slamming the stick against the rail on every missed shot?

28. Budweiser cue. Or better, "My buddy sold me this Budweiser cue for only $150 dollars!"

29. "I always shoot better when I'm drunk." is number one!

30. Using 2 lbs of talc, most of it going on top of the table.

31. Chalking up only once, right after he got it off the rack. Once is good for the whole night!

32. Puts beer bottle in the pocket while shooting.

33. Placing the chalk on the ground or against the ceiling when chalking.

34. Jumping by scooping under the cue ball.

35. How about shooting directly at an object ball that's separated from the cueball by several inches, perhaps as much as 8 inches, then following through so far that the cueball goes foreword as fast as the object ball. When you call a foul, he has no clue as to what you're talking about.

36. Alternates back and forth between one eye open and both eyes open, trying to aim the shot 'just right', while swinging the cue in a curved arc nowhere near the line of the shot. Then gives YOU advice on how to play!)

37. The guy that teaches his girlfriend how to make a bridge, of course he's teaching her to put her forefinger on the top of the shaft not around it.

38. The guy that misses the pocket by a mile but sends it 2 more rails into a corner or side and walks away like he meant to do it.

39. "THE CLAW" rail bridge (also known as the "EAGLE TALON" in some states).

40. Don't forget the ever cool method of putting chalk on the ground, inserting cue into the cube and spinning the cue with the inside of foot. Wow! I'm impressed just thinking about it.

41. How about hitting the shaft on the side of the table to knock the chalk residue off after chalking?

42. Smokers who try to hold a cigarette in their mouth when they shoot and they have to hold their head sideways so the smoke won't get in their eyes. Or they set it on the rail where it rolls onto the cloth or the floor.

43. Holding a lit cigarette in grip hand while shooting.

44. Chalk upside down on rail.

45. Sitting on the cushions.

46. Grinding the chalk into the cloth to mark a spot.

thank you wally, after reading this and noting some of the techniques i have not tried.........my action is probably going to increase 200 percent :D

VAP
 
Remember playing a guy once and just as he lined his shot up, he commented "I hate spot shots". Fair enough, except that it was the cue ball, not the object ball, that was on the spot. The comment was so brilliantly ignorant, it made me wonder whether it was part of a hustle, but it turned out the guy was just plain clueless. Still, I did have a good laugh.
 
Wally in Cincy said:
Playing 14.1 on a 9-ft. table makes you appreciate the bridge.

Being 5'5" with short arms makes you appreciate the bridge. I can't touch the opposite end rail with my cue when standing on the other end. Some people have been known to take advantage of me that way, the jerks !

Dave
 
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