International Open 2025

I went to watch on Sunday afternoon and night, paid around $200 for the hotel room plus $25 general admission ticket. I enjoyed the event but do think attendance was down from 2024. I'm happy to support it, but wonder being a week prior to Thanksgiving can be tough to travel and use vacation time for us working folks.
 
It's not at all inconvenient for him, so hope he wasn't complaining (I'm assuming he wasn't) - foreign folks? - no different than going to an international event anywhere else whether here to there or there to here - travel and time will always be big factors for sure, but not unique to this event.

there's probably fatigue for some international players. i don't get the players going to a barbox event over the international though. bad timing and some bad decisions i guess sums it up. hope this doesn't affect the event going forward

either way there's still a bunch top top players present, and what a treat of a match biado and yapp put on yesterday.
 
So just a few things I want to say about this event.

The setup is beautiful with top notch tables, balls switched out for every matches, great spacing and lights, plenty of refs, and Tim doing yeoman's work staging the event via DigitalPool with scoring viewable at every table. Pat, in his welcome speech at the players meeting, made it clear he wanted everyone to have a good time and it was my experience there was nothing but exemplary camaraderie on display by every single player I encountered. And certainly it was great to see old friends again and make new ones.

Personally, I love going to events like this because they take you out of your element and the comfortable, familiar surrounds of your home room and the shots and moves you can easily anticipate from your local crew. At an event like this you're not only going to see superior play but you're also going to see new shots, strategies, and playing mechanics. And the thing is that everybody (that's you reading this) needs to be taken out of their comfort zone, experience the game from a fresh perceptive, AND, if you're paying attention, learn plenty of new stuff and gain insights into your own play. I worked on my PSR for three hours today based upon what I saw and wanted to incorporate into my game and think it's going to be a big (read huge) plus for my game. You have been warned, lol.

There was a dress code for this event which amounted to: collared shirt, dress pants, and dark shoes. Anytime you were in the tournament playing area you had to be dressed that way if you wanted to get on a table. And my opinion is that it was a very good thing because every time you got in an elevator or just walked around the property with your case slung over your shoulder all the golfers would notice and ask about the tournament and no one looked like they had just gotten off an oil rig. Everyone looked good and it kinda made you proud to be a pool player, which in my experience, is kind of an unusual thing, lol.

There were maybe a dozen vendors, a cue mechanic, an action room, a room for the bar table events, and a couple of ladies offering massages. Jeanette Lee was doing some evening exhibitions and selling stuff.

So now the other side of this coin. My main issue with this event is that you play one, single, solitary match a day until the field is reduced to the last dozen or so combatants. That's tough to fade particularly when there are *plenty* of tables with half of them going unused during tournament hours. I suppose the good news is that it's not so tough to just walk in any old time and get a table to practice on. After hours it was $10 an hour table rental. I imagine that kind of scheduling has something to do with keeping bodies in the hotel as part of the deal but one match a day is really, really rough.

One other thing about the one pocket event. At this tournament they implemented a three hour cap on matches. Meaning that when the big hand hit 12 and the little hand hit whatever number was three hours after your 2, 5 or 8 start time, the guy with the most balls won. I only saw it happen once and it was so totally wrong. One guy gets off to a 2-0 lead and the other guy battles back to tie at 2-2. One guy breaks and there is like 15 minutes left on the clock. A lot of guys are watching. They each make one ball and then the clock hits its mark and one guy scores, with 12 balls left on the table, and the ref calls the match. I have zero doubt there wasn't a player in the room that wouldn't have been happy to delay the start of their match, or move to another table, just to let those two guys finish slugging it out. I know they advertised the rule up front but to see it implemented with these two guys shooting at their holes in timely fashion was so wrong.

The property is a Marriott Renaissance and so even with an event promo code you're going to pay just over $160 for the room. (I'm not sure if they were doing it for everyone but I got comped the $12 a day parking fee.) My room, while clean, could have definitely used an update with a peeling bathroom ceiling, a marginally effective HVAC, and a tub so narrow it was like trying to shower in a canoe. The staff was unfailingly pleasant and friendly and over the course of four days Dustin and I got to know the bartenders pretty well. But the drinks are not cheap. Food was available at the bar/restaurant with everything from wings, flatbreads, a jumbo pretzel that lived up to its name, burgers, and some fish and meat entrees. Out in the parking lot there was a sports bar type place call Caddyshack with some basic bar type food. Other than that you had to drive off the property (there was a shuttle into St. Augustine) which was -- not kidding -- a mile and a quarter drive past golf courses and various other properties. Then it was another 20 minutes towards St. Augustine or Jacksonville to get a good meal at a place like Caps or the Outback Crab Shack. Depending on the time of day it’s almost an hour to Jacksonville International.

So, that's it. I finished tied for 12th and in the money. On the balance it was good experience for me. Next stop: Railyard in Louisville next month :- )

Lou Figueroa
 
Last edited:
So just a few things I want to say about this event.

The setup is beautiful with top notch tables, balls switched out for every matches, great spacing and lights, plenty of refs, and Tim doing yeoman's work staging the event via DigitalPool with scoring viewable at every table. Pat, in his welcome speech at the players meeting, made it clear he wanted everyone to have a good time and it was my experience there was nothing but exemplary camaraderie on display by every single player I encountered. And certainly it was great to see old friends again and make new ones.

Personally, I love going to events like this because they take you out of your element and the comfortable, familiar surrounds of your home room and the shots and moves you can easily anticipate from your local crew. At an event like this you're not only going to see superior play but you're also going to see new shots, strategies, and playing mechanics. And the thing is that everybody (that's you reading this) needs to be taken out of their comfort zone, experience the game from a fresh perceptive, AND, if you're paying attention, learn plenty of new stuff and gain insights into your own play. I worked on my PSR for three hours today based upon what I saw and wanted to incorporate into my game and think it's going to be a big (read huge) plus for my game. You have been warned, lol.

There were maybe a dozen vendors, a cue mechanic, an action room, a room for the bar table events, and a couple of ladies offering massages. Jeanette Lee was doing some evening exhibitions and selling stuff.

So now the other side of this coin. My main issue with this event is that you play one, single, solitary match a day until the field is reduced to the last dozen or so combatants. That's tough to fade particularly when there are *plenty* of tables with half of them going unused during tournament hours. I suppose the good news is that it's not so tough to just walk in any old time and get a table to practice on. After hours it was $10 an hour table rental. I imagine that kind of scheduling has something to do with keeping bodies in the hotel as part of the deal but one match a day is really, really rough.

One other thing about the one pocket event. At this tournament they implemented a three hour cap on matches. Meaning that when the big hand hit 12 and the little hand hit whatever number was three hours after your 2, 5 or 8 start time, the guy with the most balls won. I only saw it happen once and it was so totally wrong. One guy gets off to a 2-0 lead and the other guy battles back to tie at 2-2. One guy breaks and there is like 15 minutes left on the clock. A lot of guys are watching. They each make one ball and then the clock hits its mark and one guy scores, with 12 balls left on the table, and the ref call the match. I have zero doubt there wasn't a player in the room that wouldn't have been happy to delay the start of their match, or move to another table, just to let those two guys finish slugging it out. I know they advertised the rule up front but to see it implemented with these two guys shooting at their holes in timely fashion was so wrong.

The property is a Marriott Renaissance and so even with an event promo code you're going to pay just over $160 for the room. (I'm not sure if they were doing it for everyone but I got comped the $12 a day parking fee.) My room, while clean, could have definitely have used an update with a peeling bathroom ceiling, a marginally effective HVAC, and a tub so narrow it was like trying to shower in a canoe. The staff was unfailingly pleasant and friendly and over the course of four days Dustin and I got to know the bartenders pretty well. But the drinks are not cheap. Food was available at the bar/restaurant with everything from wings, flatbreads, a jumbo pretzel that lived up to its name, burgers, and some fish and meat entrees. Out in the parking lot there was a sports bar type place call Caddyshack with some basic bar type food. Other than that you had to drive off the property (there was a shuttle into St. Augustine) which was -- not kidding -- a mile and a quarter drive past golf courses and various other properties. Then it was another 20 minutes towards St. Augustine or Jacksonville to get a good meal at a place like Caps or the Outback Crab Shack. Depending on the time of day it’s almost an hour to Jacksonville International.

So, that's it. I finished tied for 12th and in the money. On the balance it was good experience for me. Next stop: Railyard in Louisville next month :- )

Lou Figueroa
Nice, might see you there..
 
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I'm always curious about the prize money in each division. Is that a secret?
According to the Digital Pool pages.
9-Ball not showing payouts yet.
Amounts shown here in $thousands.

Bigfoot
1 -- 8​
2 -- 4​
3/4 -- 2​
Total -- 16​

14.1
1 -- 7​
2 -- 4.5​
3/4 -- 2.5​
5/8 -- 1.5​
9/12 -- 1​
13/20 -- 0.2​
Total -- 28.1​
1-Pkt.
1 -- 6​
2 -- 4​
3/4 -- 3​
5/6 --2​
7/8 -- 1.5​
9/11 -- 1.1​
12/16 -- 0.820​
Total -- 30.4​
 
I'm Facebook friends with Mark. I can shoot him a private message later today.

I looked up Leonardo Andam on Google, and sure enough, he had the fatal motorcycle accident on May 22, 2014.

Marlon Manalo was a player with one of the more interesting paths in the cue world. Long before his pool fame, he actually played snooker and even owned a snooker club. He also earned a degree in economics. In the early 2000s he jumped onto the American pool scene, and during the IPT boom he really made noise, 5th place at the IPT King of the Hill in Orlando (December 2005) for $66,000 and runner-up to Thorsten Hohmann at the IPT North American event in Vegas, earning $99,000.

After that run, Marlon shifted gears and entered politics in the Philippines, holding various positions over the years. But he never walked away from cue sports completely. He competed in the Qatar Open in December 2024, and as of August 2025 he’s the CEO of Pacman’s Cue Club.

Back in the Joss Northeast 9-Ball Tour days, the Filipino players usually traveled like a family, eating together, playing cards or chess between matches. Marlon was different. Cool, calm, a bit of a lone wolf. Friendly, but not part of the off-table pack, almost like the Filipino Fonz on the tournament trail.

Some careers really do take the scenic route.

I was able to snap a photo of Buddy Hall and Marlon at the IPT King of the Hill.

View attachment 864355


Here he is at a Joss event in Turning Stone with Keith.

View attachment 864354

JAM, sometimes I think you have a picture of every pool player you’ve ever seen. Amazing!
Seriously, you should consider making a hard cover coffee table book. Players and rooms!
I think you’d have a best seller!

Will Prout
 
According to the Digital Pool pages.
9-Ball not showing payouts yet.
Amounts shown here in $thousands.

Bigfoot
1 -- 8​
2 -- 4​
3/4 -- 2​
Total -- 16​

14.1
1 -- 7​
2 -- 4.5​
3/4 -- 2.5​
5/8 -- 1.5​
9/12 -- 1​
13/20 -- 0.2​
Total -- 28.1​
1-Pkt.
1 -- 6​
2 -- 4​
3/4 -- 3​
5/6 --2​
7/8 -- 1.5​
9/11 -- 1.1​
12/16 -- 0.820​
Total -- 30.4​
Fleming is trying to create a second DCC type event, but the prize money is anemic by comparison.
 
there's probably fatigue for some international players. i don't get the players going to a barbox event over the international though. bad timing and some bad decisions i guess sums it up. hope this doesn't affect the event going forward

either way there's still a bunch top top players present, and what a treat of a match biado and yapp put on yesterday.
Could SVB have made more if he'd skipped the barbox event? My quick math is showing that he could have won the Bigfoot, 14.1, and the One pocket and still made less than he did in North Carolina.
 
Shane Van Boening won $20,000 at the Ultimate event, according to Cuetec. He is also playing in the 9 ball event at the International.

He only missed the smaller Intl events that don't pay much.
 
So just a few things I want to say about this event.

The setup is beautiful with top notch tables, balls switched out for every matches, great spacing and lights, plenty of refs, and Tim doing yeoman's work staging the event via DigitalPool with scoring viewable at every table. Pat, in his welcome speech at the players meeting, made it clear he wanted everyone to have a good time and it was my experience there was nothing but exemplary camaraderie on display by every single player I encountered. And certainly it was great to see old friends again and make new ones.

Personally, I love going to events like this because they take you out of your element and the comfortable, familiar surrounds of your home room and the shots and moves you can easily anticipate from your local crew. At an event like this you're not only going to see superior play but you're also going to see new shots, strategies, and playing mechanics. And the thing is that everybody (that's you reading this) needs to be taken out of their comfort zone, experience the game from a fresh perceptive, AND, if you're paying attention, learn plenty of new stuff and gain insights into your own play. I worked on my PSR for three hours today based upon what I saw and wanted to incorporate into my game and think it's going to be a big (read huge) plus for my game. You have been warned, lol.

There was a dress code for this event which amounted to: collared shirt, dress pants, and dark shoes. Anytime you were in the tournament playing area you had to be dressed that way if you wanted to get on a table. And my opinion is that it was a very good thing because every time you got in an elevator or just walked around the property with your case slung over your shoulder all the golfers would notice and ask about the tournament and no one looked like they had just gotten off an oil rig. Everyone looked good and it kinda made you proud to be a pool player, which in my experience, is kind of an unusual thing, lol.

There were maybe a dozen vendors, a cue mechanic, an action room, a room for the bar table events, and a couple of ladies offering massages. Jeanette Lee was doing some evening exhibitions and selling stuff.

So now the other side of this coin. My main issue with this event is that you play one, single, solitary match a day until the field is reduced to the last dozen or so combatants. That's tough to fade particularly when there are *plenty* of tables with half of them going unused during tournament hours. I suppose the good news is that it's not so tough to just walk in any old time and get a table to practice on. After hours it was $10 an hour table rental. I imagine that kind of scheduling has something to do with keeping bodies in the hotel as part of the deal but one match a day is really, really rough.

One other thing about the one pocket event. At this tournament they implemented a three hour cap on matches. Meaning that when the big hand hit 12 and the little hand hit whatever number was three hours after your 2, 5 or 8 start time, the guy with the most balls won. I only saw it happen once and it was so totally wrong. One guy gets off to a 2-0 lead and the other guy battles back to tie at 2-2. One guy breaks and there is like 15 minutes left on the clock. A lot of guys are watching. They each make one ball and then the clock hits its mark and one guy scores, with 12 balls left on the table, and the ref calls the match. I have zero doubt there wasn't a player in the room that wouldn't have been happy to delay the start of their match, or move to another table, just to let those two guys finish slugging it out. I know they advertised the rule up front but to see it implemented with these two guys shooting at their holes in timely fashion was so wrong.

The property is a Marriott Renaissance and so even with an event promo code you're going to pay just over $160 for the room. (I'm not sure if they were doing it for everyone but I got comped the $12 a day parking fee.) My room, while clean, could have definitely used an update with a peeling bathroom ceiling, a marginally effective HVAC, and a tub so narrow it was like trying to shower in a canoe. The staff was unfailingly pleasant and friendly and over the course of four days Dustin and I got to know the bartenders pretty well. But the drinks are not cheap. Food was available at the bar/restaurant with everything from wings, flatbreads, a jumbo pretzel that lived up to its name, burgers, and some fish and meat entrees. Out in the parking lot there was a sports bar type place call Caddyshack with some basic bar type food. Other than that you had to drive off the property (there was a shuttle into St. Augustine) which was -- not kidding -- a mile and a quarter drive past golf courses and various other properties. Then it was another 20 minutes towards St. Augustine or Jacksonville to get a good meal at a place like Caps or the Outback Crab Shack. Depending on the time of day it’s almost an hour to Jacksonville International.

So, that's it. I finished tied for 12th and in the money. On the balance it was good experience for me. Next stop: Railyard in Louisville next month :- )

Lou Figueroa
Funny you mention the dress code. I don't care for the race car outfits they all seem to be wearing.
 
Shane Van Boening won $20,000 at the Ultimate event, according to Cuetec. He is also playing in the 9 ball event at the International.

He only missed the smaller Intl events that don't pay much.
The 20k was just for the Open. I believe he also cashed in the pairs and mixed pairs. He took a final 16 in the shootout which I believe got him no money.
 
mike sigel commenting on the one pocket semifinal:

"i don't like one pocket"
"i don't know who this guy is"

then goes on to explain how "this guy" should play. he ran 8 and out
 
why does everyone keep knocking the guy? he just told a great story about playing bugs and ronnie that was awesome. don't like him turn the fkng sound off. pretty easy. i guess it is.
 
I have not paid much attention to anything besides the straight pool but I just noticed that some big names are missing from this event such as SVB and Woodward. Did they completely skip this event or are they only doing the nineball side of things?
 
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