Yep...Earl Rapier. Earl taught me so much about pool its unbelievable. Most of which I didn't "learn" until much later. He was way too advanced for me to comprehend it all at the level I was at then, but that didn't stop him from trying. Bless his heart, he was patient. Very quiet and very patient. He was try to tell me something and I would just argue and argue.....(what else would you expect..I'm just a woman!). I'd just say let me PLAY!
I've told this story before but this is pretty typical of things that would happen: we are playing one day and he is teaching me some 9-ball safeties. It is a pretty standard safety but I'm asking him how I can KNOW exactly where the cue ball and OB will wind up.....he tells me that if the CB hits the OB at 45 degrees, then both balls will travel an equal distance......... I said, oh....okay. I proceeded to look it over once more and then turned to him and SCREAMED ......"where the hell is 45 degrees????"! He just smiled and said, okay...just hit it.
Now....that's the type of teaching he would do. Rather than to tell me hit it here, hit it there, do this or do that...he would relay "theories" to me. Many many theories. Equations to use to figure out what to do. Truth is - that day I really didn't conceive of 45 degrees or even take the time to learn that theory from him. I'm ashamed to say...... but many, many years later - I was at a pro tournament, playing a top player when a situation presented itself and I wasn't sure of what to do.....I stood for a minute or so...and I heard him say....if the CB hits the OB at 45 degrees both balls will travel an equal distance......I nailed it. There are many times I still hear him - but now it makes sense. I truly wish I would have been more open to the information that he gave me then - he was really a genius.
Earl was a former career Navy guy....he had made it pretty far (E5, I think) and was up for a higher rank - needed only 2 years to retire. They did something bad to him and he just quit. Had an opportunity to leave and just quit. That's the way he was. He dedicated his all to something and would give and give but don't do him wrong. He was a quiet guy and a great friend. There wasn't anyone that I knew of that didn't like him. I too, have a set of his books. Wouldn't get rid of them for anything in the world. They would make a good read for you.
BTW....you did a great job commentating during the Galveston tournament

....Troy listened/watch daily and I did too when I could. We soooo wish we could have been there! Life....sometimes it gets in the way.