I just got home two hours ago and it's 3 AM now. It's been a lonnng week and I'm dead tired, but there is no way I can't post on this thread.
All the following is mostly my point of view with some facts thrown in for good measure. First of all, imo opinion "rack your own" is the best way to go in 9-Ball. "Loser racks" can take forever and a day, and lead to some heated debates. "Winner racks" is the lesser of two evils. Ideally we would have referees racking on all the tables, but that just isn't possible, although it was considered this year. We used neutral rackers on the final day because it was possible, and we had three well qualified people to do that job.
There will NEVER be an easy solution for racking the balls in 9-Ball, mainly because of the open configuration of the rack. The best solution we've come up with is to add a ball and make it Ten Ball. Now you have a solid rack with a full back row. Still the very best players (and breakers) will find a way to make balls with any rack. A lot of people don't know that one of Earl's great talents was figuring out the beat break on any given table. He would practice breaking and work things out prior to his match. His break was not the hardest, just the most effective. One reason why Ralf has had so much success in tournaments is his ability to figure out the proper (best) break on the tables being used. And yet no one talks about his powerful break. It just happens to work real well! Funny huh?
I do happen to like the Delta rack. I think it is the best engineered triangle I've seen so far. Diamond's wood triangle is another good one by the way. And I've come to love the Magic rack. But all these racks can be defeated/overcome by the skills (and talent) of today's top players. There has never been a rack genius like Corey and other players have learned a lot from him, mostly by close observation. Once again, in the game of 9-Ball we may never find a way to achieve a "perfect" rack. One change you can expect to see next year in the Open is that the nine ball will not count on the break in the two bottom corner pockets. That cuts out a lot of shenanigans on the rack.
What happened in the Hot Seat match yesterday, was that I had a difficult time getting the one ball to freeze to the first two balls perfectly. No matter how I racked them it still separated by a hair from one ball behind it. And when I say a hair, it was literally maybe a couple of thousandths of an inch from being frozen. No matter, Mika wasn't happy and I did my best to accommodate him. A big mistake on my part and maybe not the best thing for Mika either. I should have done what Bill Stock (an excellent referee) did in the second match, told him to go ahead and break. I allowed Mika too much leeway and it may have been to his detriment, because he lost any momentum he may have had. Mika appeared out of sorts in this match for whatever reason. I'm not sure what was going on with him, but he displayed negative energy from start to finish. And it wasn't just because of the rack either. A big contrast to the last two years when he was focused and very comfortable on the final day. In spite of all this, the match should have gone hill-hill. In that last rack Mika made some beautiful shots (how about that four ball down the rail!) and then missed a relatively easy shot on the seven ball. He just lost focus on that shot and it cost him - DEARLY!
We did try changing the spot, which will often work, but for whatever reason even that didn't help. Bill and Kenny had just as much trouble racking as I did. To his credit Mika did finish third this year, after two wins. Not so bad, imo. He also won the $1,000 high run award, opening with six perfect run-outs in a match on Thursday evening. The $11,000 he picked up this week should do a lot to soothe the pain of losing to Shane.