Thanks for everybody's comments on the interview article.
About the Tom, Dick, and Harry, I think you might be taking it out of context a little bit. "Tom, Dick, and Harry" has always been a slang. I don't mean any harm or meanness when I say that or converting to the players of the past or talking about the players of the future.
I'll put it in a little bit better perspective. In the past, for me, I had to be in combat to be able to compete with all the great players back then and certainly today. I'm not going to go out there just to shake people's hands, take pictures, and sign autographs. I would rather be able to beat somebody and then shake peope's hands, take pictures, and sign autographs.
I've always been a competitor, and if I can't compete at a high level, I'd rather not complete at all. That is what I meant about playing every Tom, Dick, and Harry. Believe me, we had plenty of world beaters when I was playing in my prime.
Back then, we played everything on Gold Crowns with slow cloth. Some tables were tight; some tables weren't. When these Diamond tables came to the game, I think it changed it a little bit, and I believe that a lot of people can't play on Diamonds like they can Gold Crowns.
Scott Frost is a perfect example playing Alex Pagulayan on a tough gold Crown where the tables were wet, and Scott Frost is used to playing on a Diamond. As it turned out, it seems as if it was a mismatch, and from what I saw, he got his nuts shot in. I'm just saying. I love you, Scott, but it is what it is. :grin-square:
As far as the players today and the players of yesterday, I have respect for them all. There are some of them today that I haven't had a chance to play that I wish I could have played back when I was playing just to see where we were at, but it was a different time, different equipment, and the people were different. I think with the equipment and the rules in my time, which back then we played two-shot/roll-out, you might see a different character of players. Everything has changed. Sticks are different, made with different materials. They had no jump cues back then. Well, you get my drift.
Hope everybody does well in all their pool endeavors. Eaerthquake Out.