Gary Spaeth

krelldog

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
I just finished watching a bank pool match between Buddy Hall and Gary Spaeth. Both guys put on an awesome display. Gary prevailed with some ridiculously amazing banks in the deciding game. I'm just curious did Gary excel at other games? In fact any information on his career would be appreciated.

Thanks,

krelldog
 
I used to watch him play years ago at the monday night tournaments at airway billiards in dayton...the best way i can describe how Gary played is AMAZING...
 
I played Gary a few times up in Cincinnati. He was a strong 9-ball player.

Actually, although he played 9-ball very well it was probably his worst game. Banks of coarse was his best game but he also played very good one-hole. He beat a number of very good one-hole players who had no knowledge of him playing so well. He beat Cecil Tugwell in a tournament in Georgia one time and Tugwell thought it was a fluke so followed him back to Cincinnati. They started out with Cecil giving Gary a ball but two days later Gary was giving Cecil two balls. He was so confident in his banks and played position so well that he could play one-hole very aggressively.

Dick
 
Gary is one of our inductees into the One Pocket Hall of Fame, in our Bank Pool category. You can check out his HOF page here:

http://www.onepocket.org/SpaethHOF.htm

His father was another great all around player and Johnston City veteran -- including the very first 1961 tournament.
 
Gary was unfortunate because they stopped having bank pool tournaments for the majority of the time he was at his best.
Otherwise he would have undoubtedly had many more titles.
Jason Miller another great banker from Dayton Ohio played Gary a lot when he was younger , no doubt picking up a lot of his expertise.
I will never forget the Derby City Classic when Gary was very near the end of his life.
He came in I believe right after a chemo treatment and got into the semifinals or finals and you could tell he was very ill.
Takes a lot of courage to overcome something like that.
 
Cuesmith

Sherm Adamson & Gary Spaeth were best buds & road pals. He probably knows about Gary as anybody that posts here. My bet is, even more than anybody else here.

If you do a search on Gary Spaeth here & at 1Pocket.org, you'll get some good stories and insightful info.

My opinion is that Gary Spaeth was also a top shelf 1P player. His 9 ball game was less steady than his banks & 1P, but he still played 9 ball at a very high level.

Also, you probably know this, but Accu-Stats has a bunch of matches featuring Gary.

His memory will live on for a long time to come.
 
I watched Gary growing up mostly at the Beechmont Billiards in Cincinnati, best all around player I've ever seen in our area. I believe he played about the same speed as Donny Anderson who was a world champ at bankpool. He is still the talk of the town so to speak when you get to talking billiards with locals or the old timers in the area.
 
Reading all of these "WONDERFUL POST" is what motivates me to go in and practice everyday.the ol timers ( no disrepect intended here) really knew and had a love and appreciation for the game.:clapping:
 
I just finished watching a bank pool match between Buddy Hall and Gary Spaeth. Both guys put on an awesome display. Gary prevailed with some ridiculously amazing banks in the deciding game. I'm just curious did Gary excel at other games? In fact any information on his career would be appreciated.

Thanks,

krelldog

Gary was my best friend and road partner for over 20 years. When he was in his prime no one could stay with him at bank pool, but contrary to what a lot of people think he was also a very good Nine ball player. In all the years

Gary and I ran together, he played Buddy Hall about 5 or 6 different times in tournament play and only lost once. I've seen him beat Earl Strickland, Ginky, Archer, Parica, Daulton and most all the top players at one time or

another at nine ball, but to be honest, his nine ball break probably held him back a little. His position play was as good as anyones and his shot making and safety play was better than most. And of course if he got in a bad spot,

he often banked his way out of trouble. Gary was also a truly good friend and someone I could trust with my life. I was his stakehorse throughout most of his career and there was NEVER any doubt that he wasn't trying his best

to win. He had several people over the years ask him to do "business" which he flat out refused. One time a player asked him to dump and he said "hell no, my stakehorse is my best friend!" Then the guy asked him to "catch" and

he said "no I don't think so, but I'll run it by my stakehorse" When he told me he explained that the guy first asked him to dump, which of course he refused, then he asked him to "catch" which he didn't feel right about but since

I was his partner he felt I should also have some say on the subject. I told him"HELL NO, beat that MF like a red headed stepchild! He did exactly as I suggested only a little more vigorously! Gary was a great player and his

biggest weakness, if you could call it that, was his love for his kids. It was hard to keep him out on the road long enough to build up a really big bankroll. Once we made enough for him to pay his bills and give him a few weeks

spending money he wanted to get back home to his family! Around Cincinnati, he got no action, unless a road player came through, and most of them knew better than to try him. He gambled with Bugs 5 times and won 4 out of

the 5 times the other time Bugs won a grand but we'd jacked the bet and they came up even in sets won. In all fairness, Bugs did spot Gary a ball playing one pocket, one of those times, but I don't think the spot really made

any difference in the outcome. He wore Cecil Tugwell out playing one pocket. About the only guy who came to Cincinnati and beat Gary was a young CJ Wiley and he refused to play anything but nine ball and the break was the

deciding factor that night. Gary's only weak game was straight pool. He just hated the game. It bored him and he never gambled at it, or played it for that matter!

Gary was taken from us way too early. To be honest, he was playing the best pool of his life, the last few years. He'd matured and had gotten more patient. Played more & better safeties, took less chances and just played

better pool. I still miss him every day and he's been gone 10 years now!

God Bless You Gary! I hope you're up there playing One Pocket with your Dad, Joey Spaeth!
 
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Thanks Sherm,

He seemed like a class act in the match I saw. In fact Buddy Hall and him seemed to get along very well despite trying to beat each other. Thanks for all the responses. Rest in peace Gary......
 
He is the only road player I know, who broke the boundaries and went on road in Germany and few nearby European countries.He praised the European players for their class act.When they loose they give the money with a hand shake and 'thank u,' unlike American gamblers who throw the money on the floor or table with anger or waiting in the parking lot for the winner to come out.
Will 'cue smith' tell us about some experiences of Gary while on Road in Europe?
 
Awesome

Gary was my best friend and road partner for over 20 years. When he was in his prime no one could stay with him at bank pool, but contrary to what a lot of people think he was also a very good Nine ball player. In all the years

Gary and I ran together, he played Buddy Hall about 5 or 6 different times in tournament play and only lost once. I've seen him beat Earl Strickland, Ginky, Archer, Parica, Daulton and most all the top players at one time or

another at nine ball, but to be honest, his nine ball break probably held him back a little. His position play was as good as anyones and his shot making and safety play was better than most. And of course if he got in a bad spot,

he often banked his way out of trouble. Gary was also a truly good friend and someone I could trust with my life. I was his stakehorse throughout most of his career and there was NEVER any doubt that he wasn't trying his best

to win. He had several people over the years ask him to do "business" which he flat out refused. One time a player asked him to dump and he said "hell no, my stakehorse is my best friend!" Then the guy asked him to "catch" and

he said "no I don't think so, but I'll run it by my stakehorse" When he told me he explained that the guy first asked him to dump, which of course he refused, then he asked him to "catch" which he didn't feel right about but since

I was his partner he felt I should also have some say on the subject. I told him"HELL NO, beat that MF like a red headed stepchild! He did exactly as I suggested only a little more vigorously! Gary was a great player and his

biggest weakness, if you could call it that, was his love for his kids. It was hard to keep him out on the road long enough to build up a really big bankroll. Once we made enough for him to pay his bills and give him a few weeks

spending money he wanted to get back home to his family! Around Cincinnati, he got no action, unless a road player came through, and most of them knew better than to try him. He gambled with Bugs 5 times and won 4 out of

the 5 times the other time Bugs won a grand but we'd jacked the bet and they came up even in sets won. In all fairness, Bugs did spot Gary a ball playing one pocket, one of those times, but I don't think the spot really made

any difference in the outcome. He wore Cecil Tugwell out playing one pocket. About the only guy who came to Cincinnati and beat Gary was a young CJ Wiley and he refused to play anything but nine ball and the break was the

deciding factor that night. Gary's only weak game was straight pool. He just hated the game. It bored him and he never gambled at it, or played it for that matter!

Gary was taken from us way too early. To be honest, he was playing the best pool of his life, the last few years. He'd matured and had gotten more patient. Played more & better safeties, took less chances and just played

better pool. I still miss him every day and he's been gone 10 years now!

God Bless You Gary! I hope you're up there playing One Pocket with your Dad, Joey Spaeth!

Sherm,
Thanks for honoring Gary like you do. Your post not only showed more about what Gary was about, it also shows the loyalness and love that make you the man that you are. God bless you buddy.
 
Unfortunately the only times I got to see Gary play were at Viking tournaments here in Columbus. I knew about him and made sure I watched his matches when I was able to. He was always respectful to his opponent and just went about his business on the table.

The big treat though was watching him jump up in between matches on empty tables and throw balls out and bank them in. He hit them with all different speeds but watching him bank them in at what seemed like ninety miles per hour was amazing. He was someone who you would consider a it privilege to get to see play IMHO.

Keith
 
I remember seeing Gary play several times, including winning the Bank Division at the Clyde Childress tournament in 1985. He even made a appearance at a local bar and tortured some local shortstops for a grand. Later I saw his father (Joey) at the same bar winning a couple of hundred playing 8 ball. I have distinct memories of him firing in banks at about 100 miles an hour but also cutting a ball about as good as anyone I have seen!
 
I remember seeing Gary play several times, including winning the Bank Division at the Clyde Childress tournament in 1985. He even made a appearance at a local bar and tortured some local shortstops for a grand. Later I saw his father (Joey) at the same bar winning a couple of hundred playing 8 ball. I have distinct memories of him firing in banks at about 100 miles an hour but also cutting a ball about as good as anyone I have seen!

Gary came down to Miami in the mid-80's to play in our Pepsi Open @ Bird Bowl. He was warming up just FIRING banks at rocket speed on a rather tough CGI we had, super nice guy too. Years later I played between Gary on one table and Bug on the other at the US Open One Pocket tournament in Kalamazoo in '97 or '98. I had a hard time concentrating on my own table watching those two :p
 
One of my favorite bank pool matches on YouTube is of Gary Spaeth

Folks:

One of my favorite YouTube bank pool matches is the action match between Gary Spaeth and Bugs Rucker:

Part 1 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=UARNoccs5-0
Part 2 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=cUzc8_zA8u8
Part 3 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=JRJ64q5hw2g
Part 4 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=gYai7DYaEos
Part 5 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=icS3tMz4cyY
Part 6 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=tHC1lpGYccs
Part 7 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=gEuZs97N59w
Part 8 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=Nryo7tljHxI
Part 9 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=E7Xxa9G5-yU
Part 10 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=UK3RNXfNvsE
Part 11 of 11:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=OCSP-habpPA

I know that, being bank pool, these videos are somewhat "off topic" from the main theme of this thread (i.e. "what other games besides bank pool was Gary good in?"), but with Gary's name not being brought up nearly as often as it should, I though the videos would highlight this man's greatness regardless of the game.

-Sean
 
Ive told this story before, but I will pass it along again.

I only got to see Gary Spaeth play once. It was at the Derby City and I didnt know him from Adam. Again, from the time he was warming up and all through the match I thought, "WHO THE HELL IS THIS GUY?!?!?!"

For those who dont know banks is very regional and not played AT ALL in some places so dont hate.

And then he was gone forever....

Ken
 
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