Livestream: Nikos Ekonomopoulos VS Niels Feijen Challenge Match

Quite a finish for Nikos. I started watching with Nikos behind 16-21. He then proceeded to beat Niels 19-5 the rest of the way for a 35-26 victory.

Quite a finish.

[But I don't recall ever seeing Niels play so poorly as he did in those last 24 games (excluding the 5 B&R's for Nikos in that stretch).]
Yeah, I just watched a few games earlier in the match and in two consecutive games, Niels blew extremely easy runouts - missing his shape from the 8-ball to the 9-ball. In both cases, he badly underestimated the speed of the cloth/cushions in his cue ball positioning from the 8 to the 9 - very unusual for him.

He also failed to get a high finish in the tournament in Raleigh, NC a few weeks ago, although there were many top players in that event and I don't recall who he lost to. He's clearly working hard to get his game back, after his extended layoff last year from his "tennis elbow" issue.
 
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Yeah, I just watched a few games earlier in the match and in two consecutive games, Niels blew extremely easy runouts - missing his shape from the 8-ball to the 9-ball. In both cases, he badly underestimated the speed of the cloth/cushions in his cue ball positioning from the 8 to the 9 - very unusual for him.

He also failed to get a high finish in the tournament in Raleigh, NC a few weeks ago, although there were many top players in that event and I don't recall who he lost to. He's clearly working hard to get his game back, after his extended layoff last year from his "tennis elbow" issue.

I watched the match Neils lost to Rodney on the hill in Raleigh. Neils struggled with his cue ball control on a couple shots and it cost him the match.

In the hill/hill game with Rodney, Neils had a fairly simple run out and over hit a shot and hooked himself. That was the shot that cost him that match.

Funny things happen when it's hill/hill and your trying to close out a match!
 
Nikos did something special the last part of that set.

They had been trading racks to 16 a piece with Niels blowing an opportunity to take a lead with a few fumbles. Then Niels ran 5 in a row or so to go up 21-16. Going +5 in the second half of that match with a five rack run would make you think he was going to take it down.

But Nikos didn't skip a beat. He bounced right back, making some amazing jump shots and long shots, as well as some nice positional plays, did what he had to do, and started winning them back. Again, from that point he won 19 of the next 24 games. Against Feijen. Without any huge packages. Just a rack or two at a time. Out moving him. Out shooting him. Taking a little more than what the table offered and finding a way.

Some people say that 9 ball is 'solved' and too easy for top level play. This set shows otherwise. Sure, both players have tremendous skill sets. But it wasn't necessarily the best player that won, nor the player where things just happened to go their way. It was the player that was in the right stage of mind to take the win.

When Niels was fumbling it looked like he was trying too hard, or that he was being too careful. He was trying to execute a series of individual shots well hoping it would add up to a win. Nikos was trying to win, then he architected the execution he needed to get the results he was committed to obtaining. It was really telling how quickly Nikos pounced on those extra opportunities. He looked like he expected things to go his way and because of that, while they both made some great shots and some mistakes, he did the little extras that win you matches.

My point is that 9 ball is not too easy at the top level. This is a game of skill, but also a game of mental discipline. In a match of any length there are opportunities to win and lose, and more often than not in an even match it comes down to who is better prepared to take it when the match is on the line.
 
Nikos did something special the last part of that set.

They had been trading racks to 16 a piece with Niels blowing an opportunity to take a lead with a few fumbles. Then Niels ran 5 in a row or so to go up 21-16. Going +5 in the second half of that match with a five rack run would make you think he was going to take it down.

But Nikos didn't skip a beat. He bounced right back, making some amazing jump shots and long shots, as well as some nice positional plays, did what he had to do, and started winning them back. Again, from that point he won 19 of the next 24 games. Against Feijen. Without any huge packages. Just a rack or two at a time. Out moving him. Out shooting him. Taking a little more than what the table offered and finding a way.

Some people say that 9 ball is 'solved' and too easy for top level play. This set shows otherwise. Sure, both players have tremendous skill sets. But it wasn't necessarily the best player that won, nor the player where things just happened to go their way. It was the player that was in the right stage of mind to take the win.

When Niels was fumbling it looked like he was trying too hard, or that he was being too careful. He was trying to execute a series of individual shots well hoping it would add up to a win. Nikos was trying to win, then he architected the execution he needed to get the results he was committed to obtaining. It was really telling how quickly Nikos pounced on those extra opportunities. He looked like he expected things to go his way and because of that, while they both made some great shots and some mistakes, he did the little extras that win you matches.

My point is that 9 ball is not too easy at the top level. This is a game of skill, but also a game of mental discipline. In a match of any length there are opportunities to win and lose, and more often than not in an even match it comes down to who is better prepared to take it when the match is on the line.
Yeah, kind of nice to see that it's just not us amateurs that can screw up an easy runout when you have just a slight lapse in focus / concentration.
 
... Shane pounded him in his own room by like 20 games for the cheese. ...

... The other time Shane played Nick race to 50 I think. Shane won by about 15+ racks.

Shane's 10-Ball performance that day (in April 2014) was amazing. He was successful on 43 of 49 breaks (88%) and ran out on 26 of those 43 (60% B&R on successful breaks, 53% B&R on all breaks).

The match score was 50-21.
 
Shane's 10-Ball performance that day (in April 2014) was amazing. He was successful on 43 of 49 breaks (88%) and ran out on 26 of those 43 (60% B&R on successful breaks, 53% B&R on all breaks).

The match score was 50-21.

Is it possible that that is a world record over 71 games?....it’s awesome.
 
Shane's 10-Ball performance that day (in April 2014) was amazing. He was successful on 43 of 49 breaks (88%) and ran out on 26 of those 43 (60% B&R on successful breaks, 53% B&R on all breaks).

The match score was 50-21.

Would be neat if Shane played like that all the time. Any person will lose vs someone who breaks and runs over half the time they break.
 
Is it possible that that is a world record over 71 games?....it’s awesome.

I don't know, pt; you wondered about it at the time, also. I don't recall ever seeing B&R performance that good over such a long match.

Pool-Trax was keeping stats on the match, and they said Shane shot a 951 on their Performance Rating. But that was not an Accu-Stats Total Performance Rating (TPA). I was never sure exactly how Pool-Trax calculated their rating; I don't think they published that.

And the match averaged only about 4 min. per game. Contrast that with yesterday's 9-Ball match, where what I watched (the last 24 games) averaged 7¾ min./game.
 
Shane's 10-Ball performance that day (in April 2014) was amazing. He was successful on 43 of 49 breaks (88%) and ran out on 26 of those 43 (60% B&R on successful breaks, 53% B&R on all breaks).

The match score was 50-21.

As good of a race to 50 as you will ever see. 10 ball clinic.
 
Sorry i guess I couldn't let this one go :Ρ
Yeah, same guy. This is the same guy that Shane was supposed to routinely win in 2012 mosconi cup and lift America's spirit in a crucial time in the tournament, but Shane ended up losing and didn't know what hit him.... Aaaand just to be sure he beat SVB again in the 2014 mosconi. Basically if you search for "svb loosing in the mosconi cup" youll bound to come across some videos of this guy.

Sorry you took it so personal. I just knew the name sounded familiar, and I was curious to know if it was the same player. Not to take anything away from your player, because it sounds like he has greatly improved, but as others have said a race to 6 and a race to 50 is a whole different monster. Read the most current posts in this thread, Shane beat him 50-21 and broke and ran at something like a 60% rate. Phenomenal.

Having said all of that, congrats to Nikos on beating Niels, that is not an easy task in a long race.
 
Shane's 10-Ball performance that day (in April 2014) was amazing. He was successful on 43 of 49 breaks (88%) and ran out on 26 of those 43 (60% B&R on successful breaks, 53% B&R on all breaks).

The match score was 50-21.

Holy crap, that's an unbelievable performance!
 
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