Break Stats -- 2025 Reyes Cup, October 2025

AtLarge

AzB Gold Member
Gold Member
Silver Member
Here are some break results for the 2025 Reyes Cup played October 16-19 at Ninoy Aquino National Stadium in Manila, Philippines. This event was 9-Ball racing to 11 match wins, with each match being a race to 5 games. The format was three team matches (everyone plays one game, then repeat until one side wins 5 games), up to 6 doubles matches (6 were played), and up to 12 singles matches (5 were played). Team Asia won the Cup 11-3, with the match scores on the 4 days as follows (Team Asia's score first):

Day 1 -- 4 - 0​
Day 2 -- 3 - 0 (2-day total 7 - 0)​
Day 3 -- 2 - 1 (3-day total 9 - 1)​
Day 4 -- 2 - 2​
Total -- 11 - 3

• Players for Team Asia -- Carlo Biado, Johann Chua, Duong Quoc Hoang, Albert James Manas, and Aloysius Yapp
• Players for Team Rest of the World -- Fedor Gorst, Moritz Neuhausen, Francisco Sanchez-Ruiz, Jayson Shaw, and Skyler Woodward
• Team Captains -- Francisco Bustamante (Asia) and Jeremy Jones (Rest of the World)
• Commentators (2 per match) -- Karl Boyes, Scott Frost, and Michael McMullan
• Referees -- Marcel Eckardt (6 matches), Ben Taylor-Fuente (6 matches), and one whose name I do not know (2 matches, both on Day 3)
• Announcer/Interviewer -- Abigail Davies
• Master of Ceremonies -- Carlo Pamintuan

The conditions for this event included the following:
• Rasson OX II 9-foot table with 4" corner pockets;​
• Simonis 860 Shark Grey cloth;​
• Aramith Tournament Black balls with a black-spots cue ball;​
• Magic Ball Rack racking template;​
• referee racks with the 9-ball on the foot spot and the 2-ball on one of the wings or in the back location;​
• alternate breaks from behind the head string in a box approximately 8" to each side of the long string;​
• no illegal break rule, but the referee is to enforce a forceful-break rule;​
• 30-sec. shot clock (60 sec. after the break or a push out), with one 30-sec. extension per side per game;​
• foul on all balls;​
• 3-foul rule in effect (no violations);​
• jump cues allowed;​
• all slop counts; and​
• lag for the break in each match.​

The 14 matches were as follows, in the order they were played. Match winners are bolded; total Cup scores are after each match in brackets. Team Rest of the World is abbreviated ROW.

Thurs. Oct. 16, 2025
1. Teams -- Asia ... 5-1 ... ROW [1-0]​
2. Doubles -- Manas/Yapp ... 5-2 ... Sanchez-Ruiz/Shaw [2-0]​
3. Singles -- Biado ... 5-3 ... Neuhausen [3-0]​
4. Doubles -- Chua/Duong ... 5-4 ... Gorst/Woodward [4-0]​

Fri. Oct. 17
5. Teams -- Asia ... 5-4 ... ROW [5-0]​
6. Singles -- Manas ... 5-4 ... Gorst [6-0]​
7. Doubles -- Chua/Manas ... 5-2 ... Gorst/Shaw [7-0]​

Sat. Oct. 18
8. Teams -- Asia ... 4-5 ... ROW [7-1]​
9. Singles -- Duong ... 5-1 ... Woodward [8-1]​
10. Doubles -- Biado/Yapp ... 5-0 ... Neuhausen/Sanchez-Ruiz [9-1]​

Sun. Oct. 19
11. Singles -- Yapp ... 5-1 ... Shaw [10-1]​
12. Doubles -- Duong/Yapp ... 2-5 ... Shaw/Woodward [10-2]​
13. Singles -- Chua ... 3-5 ... Sanchez-Ruiz [10-3]​
14. Doubles -- Biado/Manas ... 5-2 ... Gorst/Neuhausen [11-3]​

Overall results

Successful breaks (made at least one ball and did not foul):
Team Asia -- 73% (37 of 51)​
Team ROW -- 75% (39 of 52)​
Total -- 74% (76 of 103)
Breaker's side won the game:
Team Asia -- 59% (30 of 51)​
Team ROW -- 37% (19 of 52)​
Total -- 48% (49 of 103)
Break-and-run games on all breaks:
Team Asia -- 24% (12 of 51)​
Team ROW -- 10% (5 of 52)​
Total -- 17% (17 of 103)
Break-and-run games on successful breaks (made at least one ball and did not foul):
Team Asia -- 32% (12 of 37)​
Team ROW -- 13% (5 of 39)​
Total -- 22% (17 of 76)

Here's a further breakdown of the 103 games played in the Cup.

Team Asia broke 51 times, with the following results:​
Made at least one ball (and did not foul) and won the game -- 25 (49% of the 51 games)​
Made at least one ball (and did not foul) and lost the game -- 12 (24%)​
Broke dry or fouled but won the game -- 5 (10%)​
Broke dry or fouled and lost the game -- 9 (18%)​
Team ROW broke 52 times, with the following results:​
Made at least one ball (and did not foul) and won the game -- 16 (31% of the 52 games)​
Made at least one ball (and did not foul) and lost the game -- 23 (44%)​
Broke dry or fouled but won the game -- 3 (6%)​
Broke dry or fouled and lost the game -- 10 (19%)​
Totals for both teams on all 103 breaks:
Made at least one ball (and did not foul) and won the game -- 41 (40%)​
Made at least one ball (and did not foul) and lost the game -- 35 (34%)​
Broke dry or fouled but won the game -- 8 (8%)​
Broke dry or fouled and lost the game -- 19 (18%)​
Therefore, whereas Team Asia won 59% (30 of 51) of the games on their own break,​
They won 68% (25 of 37) of the games in which their break was successful.​
They won 36% (5 of 14) of the games in which their break was unsuccessful (fouled or dry).​
And whereas Team ROW won 37% (19 of 52) of the games on their own break,​
They won 41% (16 of 39) of the games in which the break was successful.​
They won 23% (3 of 13) of the games in which their break was unsuccessful (fouled or dry).​

Balls Pocketed:
Team Asia -- 45 on the break, 435 not on the break, 480 in total (includes 2 balls made on breaking fouls and 2 balls made other fouls)​
Team ROW -- 60 on the break, 349 not on the break, 409 in total (includes 2 balls made on breaking fouls and 1 ball made on another foul)​

Average number of balls made on the break:
Team Asia -- 0.9 on all breaks, 1.2 on successful breaks​
Team ROW -- 1.2 on all breaks, 1.5 on successful breaks​
Total -- 1.0 on all breaks, 1.3 on successful breaks​

Alternate-break packages (break-and-run games on a player's or team's own successive breaks)
Team Asia's 12 B&R games consisted of three 2-packs (one by Manas and Biado in the Day 1 Teams match, one by Manas against Gorst, and one by Yapp against Shaw) and 6 singles.​
Team ROW's 5 B&R games consisted of one 2-pack (by Gorst against Manas) and 3 singles.​

9-Balls on the break -- The 17 break-and-run games included one 9-ball on the break (1.0% of all breaks).
 
Miscellany from the data for the 2025 Reyes Cup

■ The most balls made on a single break was 4, done just once, by Gorst in a B&R against Manas.

■ 35% (36 of 103) of the games ended in one inning -- 17% (17) won by the breaking side (B&R) and 18% (19) won by the non-breaking side.

■ The average match score was 5-2.4, with one match ending at 5-0, three at 5-1, four at 5-2, two at 5-3, and four at 5-4.

■ Elapsed time per match, in minutes:
• 53 average for all 14 matches;​
• 69 for the two longest matches -- the 5-4 Duong/Chua d. Gorst/Woodward match and the 5-4 Teams match on Day 3;​
• 33 for the shortest match -- the 5-1 Teams match on Day 1.​
The elapsed time was measured from the lag until the winning ball was made, so it includes time for racking and commercial breaks. Commercial breaks were significant in these matches, generally occurring after every 3 games in a match, and lasting about 3 minutes each.​

■ Minutes per game:
• 7.2 average for all 14 matches. Estimated at 6.7 not counting commercial breaks (but counting a minute for the racking that occurred during the breaks);​
• 9.5 for the match highest in average minutes per game -- Duong d. Woodward 5-1;​
• 5.5 for the match lowest in average minutes per game -- Shaw/Woodward d. Duong/Yapp 5-2.​

■ Breaking fouls averaged 1 for every 20.6 games, other fouls 1 for every 4.9 games, and missed shots about 1 for every 1.6 games.

■ One or more safeties were played in about 67% of all games and in 80% of games that were not B&Rs.
 
Do you have the final games/racks totals?

I must have missed it if it’s in your write up.
 
Regarding Lags:

2025 -- Cup won by Team Asia 11-3
• Asia won 7 lags, ROW won 7.​
• The team that won the lag won the first game 8 times (4 by Asia, 4 by ROW).​
• The team that won the lag won the match 8 times (6 by Asia, 2 by ROW).​
• In the 4 hill/hill matches, ROW won the lag all 4 times but won the match just once (not by B&R in the last game).​
- The team that won the first game (7 by Asia, 7 by ROW) won the match 10 times (7 by Asia, 3 by ROW).​

2024 -- Cup won by Team Asia 11-6
• Asia won 10 lags, Europe won 7.​
• The team that won the lag won the first game 10 times (5 by Asia, 5 by Europe).​
• The team that won the lag won the match 8 times (6 by Asia, 2 by Europe).​
• In the 3 hill/hill matches, Asia won the lag all 3 times but won the match just once (by B&R in the last game).​
- The team that won the first game (7 by Asia, 10 by Europe) won the match 12 times (5 by Asia, 4 by Europe).​
 
Regarding Balls Made on the Break:

Team Asia averaged 0.9 balls per break on all breaks (45 balls on 51 breaks) and 1.2 balls per break on successful breaks (43 balls on 37 breaks).

Team ROW averaged 1.2 balls per break on all breaks (60 balls on 52 breaks) and 1.5 balls per break on successful breaks (58 balls on 39 breaks).

Distribution of balls made on the 103 breaks:
• 1s here means the 1-ball in the side pocket on the opposite side of the table from the breaker;
• w means the wing ball on the same side of the table as the breaker, in the nearest corner pocket

- made 1s, but no other balls -- occurred 44 times (44 balls pocketed, including 2 on fouls)​
- made 1s plus 1 or 2 other balls, but not w -- 8 times (16 balls, including 2 on a foul)​
- made w, but no other balls -- 4 times (4 balls)​
- made w and other ball or balls, but not 1s -- 0 times​
- made both 1s and w, but no others -- 11 times (22 balls)​
- both 1s and w and other ball or balls -- 3 times (10 balls)​
- made neither 1s nor w, but 1-2 other balls -- 9 times (9 balls)​
- dry, but no foul -- 22 times​
- dry and fouled -- 2 times​
Total -- 103 breaks, 105 balls pocketed (including 4 on 3 fouls)​

The 1-ball was pocketed on 65% (67 of 103) of all breaks (including fouled breaks), and 84% (64 of 76) of the successful breaks. This includes a 1-ball in a corner pocket at the head of the table once.

The wing ball on the same side of the table as the breaker was pocketed in the corner pocket nearest to it on 11% (18 of 103) of the breaks. The majority of these wing balls were kicked in by other ball(s) rather going in untouched.
 
Here are some 2025 Reyes Cup break stats for each player. [Caveat: small numbers.]

Successful breaks (made at least one ball and did not foul):

Biado -- 4 of 9 (44%)​
Chua -- 6 of 8 (75%)​
Duong -- 7 of 9 (78%)​
Manas -- 10 of 13 (77%)​
Yapp -- 10 of 12 (83% )​
Team Asia Total -- 37 of 51 (73%)​
Gorst -- 13 of 15 (87%)​
Neuhausen -- 5 of 10 (50%)​
Sanchez-Ruiz -- 8 of 10 (80%)​
Shaw -- 5 of 9 (56%)​
Woodward -- 8 of 8 (100%)​
Team ROW Total -- 39 of 52 (75%)​
Asia + ROW Total -- 76 of 103 (74%)​

Breaker's side won the game:

Biado -- 7 of 9 (78%)​
Chua -- 4 of 8 (50%)​
Duong -- 3 of 9 (33%)​
Manas -- 9 of 13 (69%)​
Yapp -- 7 of 12 (58%)​
Team Asia Total -- 30 of 51 (59%)​
Gorst -- 6 of 15 (40%)​
Neuhausen -- 3 of 10 (30%)​
Sanchez-Ruiz -- 6 of 10 (60%)​
Shaw -- 1 of 9 (11%)​
Woodward -- 3 of 8 (38%)​
Team ROW Total -- 19 of 52 (37%)​
Asia + ROW Total -- 49 of 103 (48%)​

Break-and-run games, on all breaks:

Biado -- 1 of 9 (11%)​
Chua -- 1 of 8 (18\3%)​
Duong -- 1 of 9 (11%)​
Manas -- 4 of 13 (31%)​
Yapp -- 5 of 12 (42% )​
Team Asia Total -- 12 of 51 (24%)​
Gorst -- 3 of 15 (20%)​
Neuhausen -- 1 of 10 (10%)​
Sanchez-Ruiz -- 0 of 10 (0%)​
Shaw -- 1 of 9 (11%)​
Woodward -- 0 of 8 (0%)​
Team ROW Total -- 5 of 52 (10%)​
Asia + ROW Total -- 17 of 103 (17%)​

Break-and-run games, on successful breaks:

Biado -- 1 of 4 (25%)​
Chua -- 1 of 6 (17%)​
Duong -- 1 of 7 (14%)​
Manas -- 4 of 10 (40%)​
Yapp -- 5 of 10 (50% )​
Team Asia Total -- 12 of 37 (32%)​
Gorst -- 3 of 13 (23%)​
Neuhausen -- 1 of 5 (20%)​
Sanchez-Ruiz -- 0 of 8 (0%)​
Shaw -- 1 of 5 (20%)​
Woodward -- 0 of 8 (0%)​
Team ROW Total -- 5 of 39 (13%)​
Asia + ROW Total -- 17 of 76 (22%)​

[Note: A B&R in a doubles game is credited here to the breaker.]
 
Back
Top