Greats May Come And Go But This Has Never Happened With Willie Mosconi.
"John had about one chance in four of running 527 during that 18 days of trying."
Realistically, he had hardly any chance whatsoever but it sure wasn't 25% probability.
Maybe 1 in a 100 or 3 out of a 100 just to assign a number but more like 1 in a 1,000.
If it was going to happen, it would have already. There's just not enough interest in 14.1
to develop a new record holder. Instead of just focusing on Mr. Mosconi's herculean feat
of consecutively pocking 526 balls which no one has been to match or even come close
to running >500, turn your closer attention to his records in the U.S. Open Championship
where he trounced his opponents and just totally dominated the field....and on 10" tables.
Willie Mosconi, straight pool, 526 balls on an 8-foot table on March 20, 1954
in Springfield, OH (the official record, with 35 witness signatures). Mosconi is
also on record stating his highest practice runs on a 9' table are 608 and 589.
Willie had runs of 526, 365, 355, 322, 309 and regularly ran 150 and out.
Mosconi in straight pool had runs of 365, 355, 322 and 309 balls from 1945-1953.
According to Larry Guninger, he saw Mosconi run 200 or more balls at least 20 times!
There's been a lot of great performances but Willie owns the throne. Here are some
that came close Here are some other truly noteworthy accomplishments in 14.1.
Thomas Engert, straight pool, 491 balls (the number has been reported as 492 elsewhere, but Engert signs autographs with the number 491)
Dallas West, straight pool, 468 balls (according to Mark Wilson, West had three runs of 400 or more balls on 5x10 tables).
Babe Cranfield, straight pool, 32 racks (approx. 450 balls), witnessed by Dave Capone, who racked for Cranfield
Gene Nagy, straight pool, 430 balls
Dallas West, straight pool, 429 balls
Ray "Cool Cat" Martin, straight pool, 426 balls
Allen "Young Hoppe" Hopkins, 421 balls
Arthur "Babe" Cranfield, straight pool, 420 balls, in Syracuse on a 10' table, per George Fels
John McDevitt, four-ball, 409 balls against William Goldthwait - Bumstead Hall, Boston, MA, on Oct.30, 1866
Thorsten "The Hitman" Hohmann, straight pool, 408 balls
Earl "The Pearl" Strickland, straight pool, 408 balls
Alain Martel, straight pool, 408 balls
Jean Reverchon, artistic billiards, 404 balls, record competitive score
John Schmidt, straight pool, 403 balls (he also has runs of 400, 366, 294 and 245 balls).
The records for players running over 300 balls consecutively is very long & not surprisingly,
there are few contemporaneous players that qualify. 9 Ball & 10 Ball are faster games and
much easier than running hundreds of balls consecutively. let alone 526....Cudos to Willie.
Matt B.
"John had about one chance in four of running 527 during that 18 days of trying."
Realistically, he had hardly any chance whatsoever but it sure wasn't 25% probability.
Maybe 1 in a 100 or 3 out of a 100 just to assign a number but more like 1 in a 1,000.
If it was going to happen, it would have already. There's just not enough interest in 14.1
to develop a new record holder. Instead of just focusing on Mr. Mosconi's herculean feat
of consecutively pocking 526 balls which no one has been to match or even come close
to running >500, turn your closer attention to his records in the U.S. Open Championship
where he trounced his opponents and just totally dominated the field....and on 10" tables.
Willie Mosconi, straight pool, 526 balls on an 8-foot table on March 20, 1954
in Springfield, OH (the official record, with 35 witness signatures). Mosconi is
also on record stating his highest practice runs on a 9' table are 608 and 589.
Willie had runs of 526, 365, 355, 322, 309 and regularly ran 150 and out.
Mosconi in straight pool had runs of 365, 355, 322 and 309 balls from 1945-1953.
According to Larry Guninger, he saw Mosconi run 200 or more balls at least 20 times!
There's been a lot of great performances but Willie owns the throne. Here are some
that came close Here are some other truly noteworthy accomplishments in 14.1.
Thomas Engert, straight pool, 491 balls (the number has been reported as 492 elsewhere, but Engert signs autographs with the number 491)
Dallas West, straight pool, 468 balls (according to Mark Wilson, West had three runs of 400 or more balls on 5x10 tables).
Babe Cranfield, straight pool, 32 racks (approx. 450 balls), witnessed by Dave Capone, who racked for Cranfield
Gene Nagy, straight pool, 430 balls
Dallas West, straight pool, 429 balls
Ray "Cool Cat" Martin, straight pool, 426 balls
Allen "Young Hoppe" Hopkins, 421 balls
Arthur "Babe" Cranfield, straight pool, 420 balls, in Syracuse on a 10' table, per George Fels
John McDevitt, four-ball, 409 balls against William Goldthwait - Bumstead Hall, Boston, MA, on Oct.30, 1866
Thorsten "The Hitman" Hohmann, straight pool, 408 balls
Earl "The Pearl" Strickland, straight pool, 408 balls
Alain Martel, straight pool, 408 balls
Jean Reverchon, artistic billiards, 404 balls, record competitive score
John Schmidt, straight pool, 403 balls (he also has runs of 400, 366, 294 and 245 balls).
The records for players running over 300 balls consecutively is very long & not surprisingly,
there are few contemporaneous players that qualify. 9 Ball & 10 Ball are faster games and
much easier than running hundreds of balls consecutively. let alone 526....Cudos to Willie.
Matt B.
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