I once knew a man who would have the waitress bring him water in small mixed drink glasses or shot glasses and put on a show of getting extremely drunk to get some players who knew he played better than them to think they had a chance that night. I once asked a hustler about the morality of making people think that he was drunk or couldn't play all that well in order to steal peoples money. He said he only steals from those who were trying to steal his money.
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It wasn't until I came to AZB many years later that I learned that laying down a spread for the hustlers to be drawn to was considered hustling as was playing less than your best. By those definitions I hustled thousands of people but every one of them were indeed trying to take my money. I even had a firm personal rule never to raise the bet to over five dollars a game. Yet I played for twenty a game almost every night, fifty a game a couple times most weeks, a hundred a game rarely but it did happen. Why? Because people thought they were hustling me!
It was great fun to watch someone carefully maneuver me from three or five a game, to ten, to twenty or more, all the time easing up the bet while deliberately throwing games until the bet got where they wanted it. Then there was that slight change in their demeanor, something about their actions, I knew they were ready to play pool and take off "the chump!" This was a little annoying in itself, every one of these people thought they were smarter than me. I drank a lot of beer inn those days or even mixed drinks in my earliest years so they often thought they were hustling a drunk too. True enough that I was legally intoxicated most nights but I played more pool in that condition than sober so it was no particular handicap.
In my fairly early play, when I was fifteen or sixteen, I listened to other local hustlers that persuaded me that hustling was part of being a pool player. Well, I wanted to be a pool player so I gave it a try, twice about six months apart I pulled an active hustle, doing the same thing others did to me or thought they were doing to me most every night. I pushed the bet while stalling and got someone that was content to play for a beer or a few dollars up to considerably higher stakes. Those two hustles out of thousands by AZB standards I bitterly regretted then and regret to this day. The thousands of times I banged balls into points and otherwise played the chump, "laying a spread" or "fishing" as I usually called it, I don't regret a bit. Each and every one that I played for more than five a game raised the bet themselves and they thought they had easy pickings, thought they were robbing a banger or drunk or both! People just wanting to have fun on a pool table I happily played for hours for three or five dollars a game.
I rarely played my absolute best, no reason to if I could win without it. Winning at maybe 3/4 speed made the same sense as working my day job. I was always one of the most productive men on a crew, sometimes the most productive, but only a few times did I run as fast as I could all day to see what I could do. Pool was business and it made no more sense to me to strain to run wide open shooting pool than it made to see how many feet of material I could get up every day during my day job.
I genuinely loved to hit balls, still do, so I was on a table most every night for ten or twelve years. Sometimes I played games within the game like building traps and getting the cue ball into them so the other person was in a position where it was impossible to hit a legal shot in the days before a jump cue although I did run into a few jump rods, a short piece of metal with a tip glued to it. I played pool for fun and profit. Regrets, I can remember but three times offhand. I delighted in taking the money of those that thought they were taking advantage of me!
Hu