Let me open with the fact that I'm not a one-pocket guru. My sense of what happened this weekend is this.I thought this might be a year when a one pocket specialist took the win at Buffalo's until it became obvious Filler was unstoppable. I thought knowledge of one pocket might trump raw horsepower. I don't buy streams because I don't watch most of the stream after buying one so I don't know, does Filler move well or was it more raw shot making ability? It doesn't really matter, just curiosity.
Josh had a moves game that was elite, if not quite as elite as the top few. For example, I think Tony Chohan has a few more skills in dealing with balls near his opponent's pocket than Josh. Some of the shots Tony played to remove balls near opponent's pocket were breathtaking, while Josh went wrong once or twice in this area. Josh shows at least as much billiard knowledge as anyone in the game today, and his speed control is at least as good as anyone but Gorst.
Where Josh differed from the others was in his willingness to take on some missable shots, some of them bank shots, despite the fact that there was a ball near his opponent's pocket that he knew he'd give up on a miss. His aggressive play, of course, reflected his incredible, and possibly unprecedented, skills in offensive execution. Only Gorst plays one-pocket with a similar mindset.
Josh is only one of several truly elite stars of one-pocket, but he is probably the most fearless one pocket player that we have ever seen. The old schoolers practically dare you to shoot something chancy. Filler tends to accept the challenge and, more often than not, makes them regret it.