abundy said:For what its worth, Parica told me that Buddy was supposed to play Efren again the next day and Efren never showed. Parica also said that the last year Buddy won the US Open ('98 I believe) Buddy offered to play Efren some even 9-ball for any amount if Efren would come to Florida where Buddy's stakehorse lived and Efren politely declined. Parica said when Buddy was playing good, no one could beat him in an ahead set. I also have an accu-stats video where Grady says that Buddy was the best money player ever and that in the 25 years he had known Buddy that no one beat Buddy playing for any serious amount of money. Grady said he knows from experiance because the story was true about him not missing a single ball while playing Buddy 3 or 4 races to 11 for money and Grady still lost.
Okay, I've read all these posts about the match between Efren and Buddy after the Red's tourney was over. So now you can have an up close, eye witness account from someone who was there the whole week. And I'm not W.W. Woody!
The first rendition of the "Caesar Morales" show was one of the most amazing episodes of pool playing I ever witnessed. He played in the tournament every day against the best players in the country, and his backers were giving up ridiculous spots, like four, five or six games on the wire, in a Race to Eleven. I was one of the "suckers" then too.
And Caesar (Efren) was beating everybody by scores like 11-3 and 11-4. And the filipino gangsters who brought him here were winning thousands betting on the side. At night after the tournament was over, Caesar was playing high stakes action against the top money players like Keith, Danny Medina and others. He was playing until the wee hours each night and winning still more big bucks for his backers.
This went on every day (and night) for five or six days, until mercifully the tournament ended with Caesar beating Wade Crane 11-9 in the finals. By the way, this is the only match where his opponent covered the line (they were giving three on the wire with few takers!). He had won over 20K in the tournament and maybe another 30 or 40K from all the other action. Caesar (Efren) had played virtually non stop for six days, not two. And beat everybody he played!
What I remember is that there was a lot of "heat" on this filipino contingent. This was happening in Texas after all. Some of the Texas high rollers were grumbling about this "wetback" getting out of town with all their money. And these were BAD men, capable of nearly anything. I have no doubt the filipinos were armed as well, but fortunately no one got shot or killed.
What happened instead is that Efren agreed to play Buddy for 10K (5 each) that same night after the tournament had ended. It's true it wasn't a long match. I doubt it lasted more than two hours. I think they played something like six ahead. I refereed the match and was asked to watch two or three shots. I watched the entire match. NEITHER player played particularly well!! They both missed balls and got out of line. It was no sterling performance by either side. When Buddy missed, Efren failed to get out.
It almost looked to me like Efren was "dumping" the match. He played nothing like the player who had dominated everyone for six days. I don't know what to attribute it to. He had shown me that he was indefatiguable, so I don't think being tired really explains it. I felt then, and still do now, that Efren and his backers, could feel all the heat they were getting and decided it may be best to dump off 5K and get out of town alive.
They agreed to come back and play again the next day, but probably hit the road that very night. After all the money they had won, 5K was a small price to pay. It was like paying the time after a big score.
So for what it's worth, that's what I saw that week in Houston.
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