I want the truth about Youngblood!

Are you saying that this guy is/was some sort of a nut? If this is some sort of a joke,it ain't funny .Youngblood was a champion,not a head case.

What's the deal Freddy? I thought you were a man of honor.Is this the truth?

With all due respect my friend,would you please tactfully elaborate on your statements about youngblood .Btw,I have never heard such things about him.

Tony .
 
Yes, Walt, he was a champion, but he also had his demons. Neither Freddy nor I would ever call him a "nut case". To the best of my knowledge, his problems did not involve drugs (Cannonball drank). There's no stigma attached; if the man had problems, he had problems. We're not privy as to the exact reasons he was institutionalized. GF
 
careful what you ask for

Tony,

I have no idea about Youngblood. I can tell you that most of our heroes have clay feet and that is particularly true of pool players. Seeing as how you have moved from the moon to Baker La, I used to play in the old LeCheval well before I was legal age. Here is a tale about a pool shooting demon that had no other positive attributes I ever saw.

My toughest competition that drew a crowd when we hooked up at the LeCheval was a stoner about six foot six and ninety-eight pounds. People just had to gather around when we played. He could make the most outrageous cuts that I have ever witnessed live and didn't have a nerve in his body since he was always zonked out of his mind. Sometimes he won, sometimes I won, it was a sight to see us play either way. I was young, without nerves, and gifted with eyesight considerable beyond the norm in those days. I was the better banker and could cut balls to match him . . . sometimes.

He split up with his wife leaving two small children behind and I never saw him again. His wife was a regular customer of mine in Baker years later but we had both died and moved to suburbia and neither ever even acknowledged that we had known each other well in a past life.

Hu
 
Everything in life aint perfect

Walt Frazier said:
Are you saying that this guy is/was some sort of a nut? If this is some sort of a joke,it ain't funny .Youngblood was a champion,not a head case.

What's the deal Freddy? I thought you were a man of honor.Is this the truth?

With all due respect my friend,would you please tactfully elaborate on your statements about youngblood .Btw,I have never heard such things about him.

Tony .

You're the one calling "Blood "some sort of nut," not me. I just related a story I know to be true. Maybe you are thinking about James Youngblood Brown from Texas. He was never institutionalized, but with all the death traps he got me into, from when I was on the road with him, I wouldnt have nixed the idea. We in Chicago dont think about "Blood as a nut job. We are all proud of him. If you would have been at the 1 pkt Hall of Fame Dinner when Blood got inducted this year -- and I campaigned like crazy for him -- and I was one of MC' -- you would have seen the respect I, and all the rest of us accorded the man. Plus, Cannonball Lefty Chapman had his ups and downs too. And that never mattered to nobody in Chi either. When Cannonball was old, feeble, couldnt play a lick, and couldnt run a counter either, my normally cold-hearted partner Race Track Phil Guagliardo took care of the "Ball until he went to Texas to live with mother. Yeah, Blood had his bad moments, do you think the average player would bet his whole bankroll that he would bank as many as six and out? He would be behind in a game and get a certain type shot and he would bet the whole poolroom that he would bank all the way out-- and then do it! Are you really going to accuse me of disrespecting someone like that? Certainly, Lefty was a little goofy too, do you know anybody else who tried to win every dollar in the poolroom every time he got down? That was the only way anybody could beat him, he would play and beat every human but would keep playing as long as there was action. Three days later he'd finally wear down and get broke. He kept in money only in the poolrooms that had closing hours. Tony, I know you didnt really mean anything by your remarks, but you got my righteous indignation dander up when you talked about my own personal heroes.

the Beard
 
What is this?

ShootingArts said:
Tony,

I have no idea about Youngblood. I can tell you that most of our heroes have clay feet and that is particularly true of pool players. Seeing as how you have moved from the moon to Baker La, I used to play in the old LeCheval well before I was legal age. Here is a tale about a pool shooting demon that had no other positive attributes I ever saw.

My toughest competition that drew a crowd when we hooked up at the LeCheval was a stoner about six foot six and ninety-eight pounds. People just had to gather around when we played. He could make the most outrageous cuts that I have ever witnessed live and didn't have a nerve in his body since he was always zonked out of his mind. Sometimes he won, sometimes I won, it was a sight to see us play either way. I was young, without nerves, and gifted with eyesight considerable beyond the norm in those days. I was the better banker and could cut balls to match him . . . sometimes.

He split up with his wife leaving two small children behind and I never saw him again. His wife was a regular customer of mine in Baker years later but we had both died and moved to suburbia and neither ever even acknowledged that we had known each other well in a past life.

Hu

Some kind of nursery riddle or something? Since I'm in a good mood,I'll go there with you Hu.

Ole Walt Frazier had a farm,eee-I-eee-I-ohhhhh-and on that farm he had a Gold Crown(and a hot chick) and he'd put on a show.Without a run-out here and a run-out there.Here a run,there a run,everywhere a breakNrun!

Ole Walt Frazier had a farm,eee-I-eee-I-ohhhh!!!!:)
 
I'm assuming that by Youngblood you guys are talking about Javenley Washington


Jake ( didn't know if he was the only one or what )
 
freddy the beard said:
You're the one calling "Blood "some sort of nut," not me. I just related a story I know to be true. Maybe you are thinking about James Youngblood Brown from Texas. He was never institutionalized, but with all the death traps he got me into, from when I was on the road with him, I wouldnt have nixed the idea. We in Chicago dont think about "Blood as a nut job. We are all proud of him. If you would have been at the 1 pkt Hall of Fame Dinner when Blood got inducted this year -- and I campaigned like crazy for him -- and I was one of MC' -- you would have seen the respect I, and all the rest of us accorded the man. Plus, Cannonball Lefty Chapman had his ups and downs too. And that never mattered to nobody in Chi either. When Cannonball was old, feeble, couldnt play a lick, and couldnt run a counter either, my normally cold-hearted partner Race Track Phil Guagliardo took care of the "Ball until he went to Texas to live with mother. Yeah, Blood had his bad moments, do you think the average player would bet his whole bankroll that he would bank as many as six and out? He would be behind in a game and get a certain type shot and he would bet the whole poolroom that he would bank all the way out-- and then do it! Are you really going to accuse me of disrespecting someone like that? Certainly, Lefty was a little goofy too, do you know anybody else who tried to win every dollar in the poolroom every time he got down? That was the only way anybody could beat him, he would play and beat every human but would keep playing as long as there was action. Three days later he'd finally wear down and get broke. He kept in money only in the poolrooms that had closing hours. Tony, I know you didnt really mean anything by your remarks, but you got my righteous indignation dander up when you talked about my own personal heroes.

the Beard

BINGO!!!!!!!

That's exactly who I was thinking about James Brown .I did'nt realize there were more than one youngblood .My bad .I know nothing of the Youngblood from Chicago .I've heard of cannonball and the great kenny.
 
Walt Frazier said:
BINGO!!!!!!!

That's exactly who I was thinking about James Brown .I did'nt realize there were more than one youngblood .My bad .I know nothing of the Youngblood from Chicago .I've heard of cannonball and the great kenny.

The second Youngblood was not a nut by any means. Cold and calculating might better describe him. And he could bank a little too.

Alive and well and residing in Oakland, Cal. last I heard.
 
I just find it amusing you are in Baker

I find it amusing that you are in Baker. Especially since you act so much like someone I knew from Baker although he would be in his fifties now. Maybe he is your daddy.

Hu



Walt Frazier said:
Some kind of nursery riddle or something? Since I'm in a good mood,I'll go there with you Hu.

Ole Walt Frazier had a farm,eee-I-eee-I-ohhhhh-and on that farm he had a Gold Crown(and a hot chick) and he'd put on a show.Without a run-out here and a run-out there.Here a run,there a run,everywhere a breakNrun!

Ole Walt Frazier had a farm,eee-I-eee-I-ohhhh!!!!:)
 
ShootingArts said:
I find it amusing that you are in Baker. Especially since you act so much like someone I knew from Baker although he would be in his fifties now. Maybe he is your daddy.

Hu

That would be almost impossible-considering I am 41 .My father was a tad bit older than 10 when I was born,not to mention my family's from Texas.
 
James Youngblood Brown

jay helfert said:
The second Youngblood was not a nut by any means. Cold and calculating might better describe him. And he could bank a little too.

Alive and well and residing in Oakland, Cal. last I heard.

James was a good player but the original Youngblood was miles out of his league. Probably plus 2 balls in every game. I only speak from experience.
I will now relate one for you all:

I was in an all-black poolroom in Detroit, at Courtland and Lynwood St., with, James "Youngblood" Brown. He had just finished telling me how well regarded he was in the place, when somebody called Cadillac Willy came in and demanded the money James owed him. When James gave alibi after alibi about being broke, Willy pulled a gun and started shooting. I dove under a pool table. James grabbed the biggest guy he could find and hoisted him up as a human shield to hide behind while Willy was trying to shoot him. James ended the assault by throwing his (and my) bankroll in the air (about 640$). People diving for the money interupted the attack and we were able to get out alive. When James grabbed the guy to use as a shield, that guy had a gun too, and it fell out of his pocket when James lifted him up. The gun landed right in front of me while I was under the table. Since I couldn't really see what was happening from my position, I thought it was Cadillac Willy's gun, and for a brief moment I considered picking it up and throwing down on the place. Luckily I thought better of it, because Willy was right in front of me and would probably have shot me if he saw me go for the gun.

the Beard
 
Romberg

Walt Frazier said:
That's exactly who I was thinking about James Brown . I did'nt realize there were more than one Youngblood. My bad . I know nothing of the Youngblood from Chicago. I've heard of Cannonball and the great Kenny Romberg.

(Walt PM'd me for info on Romberg. I though I should share my reply with the forum if only to show how it's human to have flaws. We all have them, people. Myself included. If anybody had a video of my life, and they played it back, for some parts I would get arrested, deported, and tarred and feathered, for low. What counts is the whole picture. The balance of the good and bad. Hopefully, we all mix in enough good to be eligible for enshrinement in the ultimate Hall of Fame, the Great Above. (Did all that pontificating come out of me? Yeckk!)
Kenny "Romberg" Remus. I knew him well. I attended his funeral. We all called him Romberg or Romboogie. He was certainly not Jewish. He was a top player and was on the improve. He did not play as good as Artie or Bugs, but who did? He beat Weenie Beenie out of 200k in Detroit and gave Larry Hubbart a ball and the break and won, in my joint, North Shore. He was a good, well-liked kid, who was murdered by his own partner, Mitch, for no apparent reason after a night of smoking crack. Mitch is now out of jail but no one will have anything to do with him.

the Beard
 
Last edited:
freddy the beard said:
James was a good player but the original Youngblood was miles out of his league. Probably plus 2 balls in every game. I only speak from experience.
I will now relate one for you all:

I was in an all-black poolroom in Detroit, at Courtland and Lynwood St., with, James "Youngblood" Brown. He had just finished telling me how well regarded he was in the place, when somebody called Cadillac Willy came in and demanded the money James owed him. When James gave alibi after alibi about being broke, Willy pulled a gun and started shooting. I dove under a pool table. James grabbed the biggest guy he could find and hoisted him up as a human shield to hide behind while Willy was trying to shoot him. James ended the assault by throwing his (and my) bankroll in the air (about 640$). People diving for the money interupted the attack and we were able to get out alive. When James grabbed the guy to use as a shield, that guy had a gun too, and it fell out of his pocket when James lifted him up. The gun landed right in front of me while I was under the table. Since I couldn't really see what was happening from my position, I thought it was Cadillac Willy's gun, and for a brief moment I considered picking it up and throwing down on the place. Luckily I thought better of it, because Willy was right in front of me and would probably have shot me if he saw me go for the gun.

the Beard

And that's why I've been begging you to do an AUTOBIOGRAPHY. Your first 2 books should have won the pulitzers of pooldom. If you write your story, you can include musings on all the great players you've crossed swords with. But, we would like to learn more about how you turned out to be such a lovable rogue. I know you'll take that as a high compliment.
Freddy, after the DVD project, why don't you consider pening your life story?
BTW, I saw a clip of your new DVD on your blog, but it's been gone for a few days. What happened to it?
I still can't figure out how to comment there. I think I have to be a registered google blog owner in order to comment. That's the best I could understand, as I tried other ways.
 
jay helfert said:
The second Youngblood was not a nut by any means. Cold and calculating might better describe him. And he could bank a little too.

Alive and well and residing in Oakland, Cal. last I heard.

At one of your tournaments in Los Angeles, I saw James Brown play Jimmy Reed (both names of singers) one hole. This was the first time I saw Brown and man was he slow - looking here and looking there - getting down getting up etc. Jimmy went to the TD and asked to put a clock on him - Brown's game went downhill from there - good move on Jimmy's part.
 
........There was a very good 1P player named Youngblood around New Jersey too. He spent several years being housed by the State and when he got out, he still had enough cash to wait out the game. "Blood's only game was 1P and when he played he won and there were no side bets against him. A quiet gentleman, he died around 2000- I never knew his first name.
 
And $10 in debt to me (he played me what he euphemistically described as a "hip" game of 14.1) since the early '70s. With even modest interest, I have, what, a couple yards coming? Thanks for the info, Jay. Best, GF
 
Problem fixed

Terry Ardeno said:
And that's why I've been begging you to do an AUTOBIOGRAPHY. Your first 2 books should have won the pulitzers of pooldom. If you write your story, you can include musings on all the great players you've crossed swords with. But, we would like to learn more about how you turned out to be such a lovable rogue. I know you'll take that as a high compliment.
Freddy, after the DVD project, why don't you consider pening your life story?
BTW, I saw a clip of your new DVD on your blog, but it's been gone for a few days. What happened to it?
I still can't figure out how to comment there. I think I have to be a registered google blog owner in order to comment. That's the best I could understand, as I tried other ways.

The 2 DVD sample shots are back up on my blog. The second one is a half masse. I think all you have to do to comment is go to the upper right hand corner of the blog and sign in. Its self explanatory I think. Keep in mind with a full biography my children are still alive. They already think Im going to hell for what they do know about me.
the Beard
 
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