Is the high run on a 10' table still Crane's 309?

alstl

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
I'm asking because of multiple threads over the years focusing on Mosconi's 526 on the 8' table. Some people discount Mosconi's run because of the table.

Has anybody beat Crane's 309 which he accomplished in 1939? I remember they used a 10' table at DCC a few years ago and only one guy got to 100 during the entire competition.
 
Arthur Cranfield ran 420 on a 5x10....
...George Fels says the Babe had plenty of witnesses.
 
I thought the record was jointly held by Crane and Mosconi, who ran 309 years later than Crane. It is surprisingly hard to find this information. It's probably in the BCA rules and records book, if anybody has a copy.
 
Chuck Norris had a high run of 1256 balls on a 5x10 table.
The reason he stopped at 1256 was that the guy recovering the table wanted to put the rails back on.
 
Chuck Norris had a high run of 1256 balls on a 5x10 table.
The reason he stopped at 1256 was that the guy recovering the table wanted to put the rails back on.

Dang it! I never thought of taking the rails off. I'm goin' for the record boys!
 
I thought the record was jointly held by Crane and Mosconi, who ran 309 years later than Crane. It is surprisingly hard to find this information. It's probably in the BCA rules and records book, if anybody has a copy.

Can't find it in my 1988 copy.

Thank You Kindly.
 
Sailor Bill, one of my mentors, I believe he ran 356, I have heard over 400. I asked him his high run he would say, never enough, when it's enough you're done. I already knew he ran over 300 on a 5 x 10 from the pool hall buzz.

I would sit for hours watching him pick racks apart, and then he would just leave in the middle of big runs, hundreds.

One day he invited me to play, it was my lucky day.
I also had the pleasure to spend many hours on the 3 cushion table with him.

He used 2 aiming systems and taught me both. He never referred to them as systems, he called them shooting lines.
He said when he was in bullcrap sessions he would talk about one but never giving up the other. When I asked why, he said; never show all your cards, even to your friends.

I never said much, just shook my head yes, took it all in, practiced what he taught me, aiming, 3 cushion, picking apart 14.1 racks etc. It was homework that I loved.

I was a kid; it was like having a hot dog with Babe Ruth.
The Sailor was an amazing talent, played all games.
He always told me to stay in school, I listened.
 
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