hangemhigh said:
Everything you wanted to know you will find in this thread. He was a class act and many still have stacks of Kodak's and prices. I love looking through them from time to time.
http://forums.azbilliards.com/showthread.php?t=78782&highlight=john+wright
I missed the above thread and didn't know about John's passing. Greg and the rest of John's family have my belated but sincerest condolences.
I met John at one of the U.S. OPen One Pocket Championships in Kalamazoo Michigan at least several years ago. I had gotten knocked out of the tournament and at the time, I believe I was playing with a Mark Moore cue which played all right but wasn't considered a high end cue by any stretch of the imagination, maybe a few hundred dollars or so.
I wandered by John's table of cues and saw more beautiful pre-owned cues than I had ever seen in one spot in my life (at that time). I wasn't really in the market for a cue and told John so when he offered to let me hit a few balls with some of his cues.
John had so many cues and my knowledge of cues was extremely limited at that time, so he just handed me a cue and said, "Go hit some balls with that one". There was an open table next to his multi-table display of cues and shot several shots at full speed and tested out the cue he handed to me. He then handed me another cue and I repeated my "test" and I told him again that I wasn't interested in buying a cue at that time and he said it was OK, but go ahead and hit some balls, which I did for practically an hour. It was fun testing out the different cues and feeling the way they hit. I have never been that much into how fancy a cue was. It has always been about the way they hit that mattered to me.
John seemed to enjoy handing me a different cue every couple of minutes and I obliged him by warping in ball after ball on the small 8 foot table. After a while, I got "real" comfortable hitting balls at warp speed on the 8 footer and was actually in pretty good stroke. I would hit several shots and then look at the identification tag on the each cue with the price marked and hand it back to John, smiling and saying thank you.
After hitting several shots at warp speed, with one rather fancy looking cue, I looked down at the identification tag and remembered that the price tag took my breath away when I realized I was SLAMMING balls into the pockets with an $8500 cue. I handed the cue back to John and apologized for hitting the balls so hard. He just smiled and said he wasn't worried and that he knew I wouldn't damage the cue by the way I handled each of the previous cues. He said if a tip flew off or a ferrule broke it was probably defective and he would just have to have it replaced because it was defective in the first place.
Yes Greg, your Dad was a SUPER-NICE guy, even to strangers like me.
JoeyA