Because Cuesports Live made a copyright claim against me, I’m just going to post this as much I can when relevant:


Because Cuesports Live made a copyright claim against me, I’m just going to post this as much I can when relevant:
It disappoints me that instead of addressing the controversy they choose to instead make a copyright claim. I’m surprised that neither them or Schmidt have said anything yet.Because Cuesports Live made a copyright claim against me, I’m just going to post this as much I can when relevant:
As a longtime (and still) admirer of John's extraordinary 14.1 skills, devotion, and gifted teaching ability, it's with extreme reluctance that I now join you in moving to the suspicious camp regarding the 626.It disappoints me that instead of addressing the controversy they choose to instead make a copyright claim. I’m surprised that neither them or Schmidt have said anything yet.
Maybe they don’t think it’s a big deal, but I do. This was supposed to be a world record attempt so what would he have done if he continued on to 670 or 715? I used to be of the belief that Johns 626 was legit and it was only withheld from the public due to piracy concerns. But now I’m in the suspicious camp.
That is fucking hysterical....Because Cuesports Live made a copyright claim against me, I’m just going to post this as much I can when relevant:
This is the best post in the past 10 years, hands down.
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Yeah HU I've seen balls touched by other balls and not move, some rocked but stayed there, like you said not so much these days as in older days, so if that's what happen it's insignificant, a ball has to really move from point A to B for it to be moving and called a foul. How you been doing HU? I often wonder about ya, besides everything on and in my body hurting all the time I'm doing great, won a Scotch Triples 8-ball tournament in Texarkana Saturday , took 12 hrs. and by the end I didn't care if We got 2nd or won, not ever playing in one of those ever again. David Harcrow"No funny business here"....
Baahahahhahhaaaa
Slow down there cow poke. I didn't say it didn't happen either. I'm just saying it does put it in question some and that it wouldnt shock me if the video never gets a home release now due to the scrutiny it could (and should) receive now that the racking fuck-up has been shown.Ta-da!
The hardliner js626’ers swallowed the hook and line, sinker and all.
Three years later, they’re trying to spit it back out, but can’t get rid of the bad taste.
I won’t say it, but, some could say, “told you so”.
Quit knocking Shaw’s bonafide run.
Yes, this is my perspective too. Aside from those suspicious rack placements we’ve seen, John did maintain a bpi similar to Jaysons, I believe, which suggests he is capable of 626. It’s just now I know manipulating the rack is potentially in his playbook which makes me doubt it. So I just would be surprised at anything at this point.Slow down there cow poke. I didn't say it didn't happen either. I'm just saying it does put it in question some and that it wouldnt shock me if the video never gets a home release now due to the scrutiny it could (and should) receive now that the racking fuck-up has been shown.
I've also never doubt Shaw's run.
Balls per inning is a pretty strong predictor. According to Gerry Fs stats, John average 88 balls per inning over 4 days. That’s 14 more than Jayson. I don’t know if that average controls for the adjusted rack, but it wouldn’t make a big difference given how many balls where pocketed over 4 days.Sorry, about how you choose to quantify hi-run capability.
Every miss is a data point(.) and ends any inning.
You fail to get the actual ability, if you just nonchalantly fail to count all the data points just because someone has pro by his moniker.
I think rules need "bright line" definitions so we're not inviting "creativity" with their interpretation. Touch a ball enough to make it visibly move, even if it rocks back into place, and that should be a foul (with all ball foul rules). Otherwise there will be arguments about whether or not it really happened, whether or not it really mattered, etc....a ball has to really move from point A to B for it to be moving and called a foul.
Well there you go.Here’s my zoomed in blurry analysis from my phone. When I see that I assume he grazed the ball on a backstroke and the ball rocked back in place on its own. To me it looked like motion and not autofocus.
For sure they woukd have quit that run at 45....I do want to first say I 100% trust Bobby and Jayson that if they thought it was a foul then they’d own it. That was clearly the kind you wouldn’t feel as a player.
Second, I just don’t care. To riff on a fun conversation from the Cue It Up podcast, these high runs are a hotdog eating contest. I really get a kick out of them. I couldn’t care less if we are using tournament rules. Jayson ran an amazing 714 for all I care.
I don’t doubt he will top it again. I know in my heart that any 800+ player can run over 1000 if they put their heart into it. Jayson seems to have that competitive side to him.
If his legacy isn’t going to be 6 US Opens then it can at least be a combination of being one of the most dominant Mosconi Cup players of all time and this too. Because this isn’t a gimme. You gotta earn it. And he is.
I need to preface this by saying, years ago I read somewhere (whether print or online is irrelevant) that you run begins AFTER a miss or foul and that's how I have played my 14.1 for years.
There are at least 13 pages of replies I haven't read before posting this so, take it with a grain of salt but...
1) Habit - during these events they are playing ALL day so it becomes a habit to take a break between attempts and (for reasons unknown) they re-rack, I do it myself.
2) Familiarity - maybe it's just what they do?
3) Maximum balls made - if I run 13 balls and miss and have a questionable leave why would I chance 2 balls when I can start over and get a clean break?
4) Immaterial - the man ran 658/669/714 (whatever you want to call it) and a few balls in the previous rack is immaterial so - post up or shut up.
Intentional versus non-intentional - please don't be THAT guy.
On March 19, in Springfield, Ohio, I ran 526 balls, a record that still stands. I was playing a two-hundred-point match against an amateur by the name of Earl Bruney in the East High Billiard Club. He made three balls off the break, then I ran two hundred and just kept going. The run took two hours and ten minutes, which means that over that span I averaged four balls a minute. I finally missed a difficult cut shot, but by that time I was weary; it was almost a relief to have it come to an end.I might be confused and was definitely not there for Willie's run.
The way I understand the story was that Mosconi was playing an exhibition match against an Ohio local and had run his signature 100 balls during the match. Then the crowd encouraged him to continue shooting? Not that Mosconi started the run solo from a break. Someone more knowledgeable can correct me.
On March 19, in Springfield, Ohio, I ran 526 balls, a record that still stands. I was playing a two-hundred-point match against an amateur by the name of Earl Bruney in the East High Billiard Club. He made three balls off the break, then I ran two hundred and just kept going. The run took two hours and ten minutes, which means that over that span I averaged four balls a minute. I finally missed a difficult cut shot, but by that time I was weary; it was almost a relief to have it come to an end.
Cohen, Stanley; Mosconi, Willie. Willie's Game: An Autobiography . Open Road Media. Kindle Edition.
Sounds like your definition of "cue ball fouls only" is different from the WPA's definition.... It's a foul....and most significantly it is a shooting foul. So even if it were "cueball fouls only", that's a foul.
For comparison:On March 19, in Springfield, Ohio, I ran 526 balls, a record that still stands. I was playing a two-hundred-point match against an amateur by the name of Earl Bruney in the East High Billiard Club. He made three balls off the break, then I ran two hundred and just kept going. The run took two hours and ten minutes, which means that over that span I averaged four balls a minute. I finally missed a difficult cut shot, but by that time I was weary; it was almost a relief to have it come to an end.
Cohen, Stanley; Mosconi, Willie. Willie's Game: An Autobiography . Open Road Media. Kindle Edition.
You are a geniusBecause Cuesports Live made a copyright claim against me, I’m just going to post this as much I can when relevant:
As a longtime (and still) admirer of John's extraordinary 14.1 skills, devotion, and gifted teaching ability, it's with extreme reluctance that I now join you in moving to the suspicious camp regarding the 626.
Arnaldo ~ That purposeful high-racking and conversationally soliciting the racker's collaboration, opens an undeniable and sad behavioral window.