DeadPoked said:
Russ Chewning said:Well, I am smart enough to know what he means, so here goes..
He is saying that you are totally disrespecting Jeanette Lee by bring sex into this, whether you are talking about with George or not. George would most likely kick your @ss, and he does construction for a living, so he is a pretty stout dude.
Russ
av84fun said:"I don't know for every tourny...for a fact... "
Well, your earlier post suggested that you did. You made a pretty broad statement without actual facts.
And what pocket size constitutes a "friggin joke" and "pathetically loose" in your brother's mind?
I am sincere in these questions. Your post stands for the proposition that women's skill level should be discounted relative the men's because (your argument goes) women play on tables with pockets significantly wider pockets.
OK, fine. Good point...if true. But to make that case, you would have to have the facts.
And as I am sure you know, the distance between the points is not necessarily the one and only measure of pocket difficulty. The other issues include the angle of the facing, shim material and depth of the shelf.
My own Olhausen has 4 7/8 corner pocket width but the shelf is so deep
(2") that an ob can sit a full 1/2 inch back of the points. They rattle and spit out hard shots like you wouldn't believe.
Regards,
Jim
rossaroni said:I understand your point, but it seems that straight pool was/is the same way. How would you like to change 14.1, so you give the players an equal chance? I am sure there have been many more matches run out in 14.1 then 9-ball(longer races).
Jaden said:Billiards, even races of multiple games, is a play till you miss.. IT would be like having a free throw shooting contest in basketball or a three point shooting contest and seeing who can make 100 shots first you shoot until you miss and then the opponent shoots, but wait, after ten shots you have to go ahead and let the opponent shoot though....to amke it more fair because you might make 30-50 shots before you miss and he won't be able to....
Russ Chewning said:Ahh.. I think I get where the misunderstanding is, now. I might have insinuated that Karen and Allison "dog" shots, but that was not my intention. I was talking about most of the other competitors on the WPBA.
The pressure I was talking about is how Karen and Allison play the "2nd tier" WPBA pros, who will get out of position, and end up playing a safe, such that the top two ladies know, that they will have at least some chance in that game.
In the male pro tournaments, forcing your opponent to kick three rails by no means guarantees that you will get a good look at the ball, or that they won't KICK IN the ball, and the same is not true in the WPBA. Not to mention the fact that your typical male pro gets out of position MUCH less than your 2nd tier WPBA pros. And when they do, they just bang in the hard shot anyways, and run out.
A perfect example is Shane Van Boening's first match against Ronnie Alcano in the US Open. He totally took control of the match. He put Ronnie under IMMENSE pressure. Ronnie had to run 3 racks every time he got to the table to have a chance.
Now, that's not a fair comparison to Karen playing Ms. anonymous 24th ranked WPBA pro, but you get the point. Karen or Allison I would figure to be a 11-5 favorite over the #24 ranked woman... Pretty much every time they played, if they played races to 11. I would not say the same is true on the men's tour. Shane cannot be an 11-5 favorite over ANYONE in the top 50, unless that person has a very bad match. He might "get lucky" for a tournament, but he's not going to consistently spot the field six games.
So, what I am saying is, no.. Karen and Allison don't really "dog it". It's easy not to dog it when you are playing much weaker players, tho. Again, not denigrating their skills! But, the point must be made.. I am not sure how Allison/Karen would perform under the pressure of standing to lose 2-3 games every time they miss a ball. Against 5 players in a row who play that well.
I know, I know.. They rarely miss balls.. But when they DO miss a really tough shot that they are forced to take, and a top male pro puts a 3-4-5 pack on them.. Do they have the mental toughness to step up and run two racks afterwards, and then play a very delicate safe, get ball in hand, and run 2-3 more racks?
I don't know, because the current female players don't put them under that kind of pressure day in-day out, the way the men do.
See what I am saying? These great women players make very, very, very few technical errors, but Efren, Johnny, Ronnie, Shane, etc.. end up beating lots of people who only make 1-2 errors per match.
Russ
Pro Baseball is like that. You have 3 outs to an inning. But, during that inning, you can score as many points as you can. That could be 0, 1, 10, 20, or even 50 or 100 (of course not likely). There is no physical cap or limit on the number of runs you can score in one inning. At no point do you have to end your turn early (say at 1 or 2 outs) because you've already scored enough.av84fun said:So, my comment stands. Based on the STANDARDS set by ALL major sports in America and around the world as far as I know, allowing the scoring person/team to keep "possession" in order to continue scoring indefinately is just ridiculous.
crawfish said:Yeah, but what about the guy that can string 10? He shouldn't be rewarded with some respect?
wincardona said:Allison,Karen,and Janette are champions in the league that they play in. They all hold up very well under pressure ,playing players that are reasonably close to their speed. They negotiate situations well playing one another,but when faced with the best male players in the world,under the right conditions they will be in uncharted waters.Playing on 4 3/4 inch pokets with a new fast surface they will remain competitive. Playing 10 ball on 4 1/4 inch pokets will be too much for any of them to deal with playing the upper echelon players.There will be too many decisions for them to negotiate well,simply because that they are unfamiliar with the problems and options. So cosequently they will break down,and when they do winning games will be extremely difficult. Especially when they will suffer in the breaking area of the game.If I had to bet, my money it would be on Archer giving 40 games to 100.
sde said:In baseball the team at bat is allowed to continue to score until their inning is completed.
I am remaining open minded as to whether or not I prefer alternate or winner breaks, but in baseball imo it would be silly for the team at bat to be forced to end their inning after one score.
Steve
jay helfert said:No such list exists. Any match-up has to be on a person by person basis. I can't match up for her. Only she can determine who she will or won't play. All I can do is support her and put some money in with her.
What I wanted to make clear is that Jeanette is one woman who will not back down from a match with a man. She would probably match up with most anyone, given the right game. And there are many players she can play an All Around match even, no weight needed. There aren't many she needs weight from, just the champions and top roadmen.
I wouldn't mind going in with her if she was playing some high speed shortstop 14.1, Banks, One Pocket and 9-Ball. You can probably throw in Three Cushions as well. Bottom line, Jeanette is the best all around women player, with Vivian second and Monica third. Have you ever seen Vivian bank? Nice talking to ya!
I get a little tired of guys knocking the women. Most of the knockers would have no chance playing any of the above three. These girls can play and they WILL gamble! They are POOLPLAYERS who happen to be women!
CaptiveBred said:Volleyball
av84fun said:"They negotiate situations well playing one another,but when faced with the best male players in the world,under the right conditions they will be in uncharted waters."
No way. Pool is not a contact sport. The players "opponents" are the balls laying on the table.
I TALKED to the best women who played in the IPT and asked them if they were intimidated by playing against men and they ALL said, in effect.."Not at all. We have nothing to lose because we aren't supposed to win."
CaptiveBred said:ya gonna make us ask why no women are allowed, Jay?
av84fun said:abundy..."Before this Cliff Joyner gave Allison the 5 and the break and Cliff won (I did not see this, but it was reported in Billiards Digest)."
What year was that?
And please consider using paragraph breaks. It makes your comments much more readable.
Thanks,
Jim