Bingo! Players from Keith's era were not one-trick ponies and could play all games. Keith, much to my surprise, won money on the snooker table when we were together, but from what I understand, there used to be ring games on snooker tables in California all the time.
First time I went on the road, we ran into a snooker table at Baker's in Tampa, Florida. That's where I met Grady Mathews. The regulars were playing a ring game on the snooker table, and my partner went bust. You could go five, six, and seven games without ever getting a shot, but yet you have to fork over $100 each time to the winner. Brutal action but nice if you can win at it.
All this "today's players are better than players from yesteryear" is not a statistically significant comparison. The equipment was much different, to include the game rules and what's considered the "gaffe" cues, e.g. jump cues and the black shafts. Even the cloth was different. Maybe a better comparision is players of today, especially the one-trick ponies, could not survive on the equipment, hardware, and rules from days gone by.
As an aside, I remember a tournament at Ultimate Billiards in Connecticut on the Joss NE 9-Ball Tour, which at that time had quite a few champions competing on a regular basis. The pool room owner put brand-new cloth on the tables, and it begain with a "G." I can't remember the name without going througn my pool archives, but it was really fast, too fast for most. Keith had no trouble adjusting because that's what road players do when on the road. You have to adjust quickly to strange equipment.
Keith made it to the finals against Ronnie Alcano. It took the railbirds longer to jockey for position and find a seat to sweat the finals match than it did for the duration of the match itself, 9 to zero. Keith wins in less than 20 minutes. A short time later, Ronnie Alcano defeated Ralf Souquet to win the World 9-Ball Championship in Philippines.
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