"MONK" Warren Costanzo...1979 World Champion

Well, a recent post about a different Monk led me to look this up. Some of you may find this thread interesting. Of course SI has moved the article. SI has a really lousy interface, but it's free. Here is the article that I think was referenced in the OP:

 
At the bottom of the page was a link to a 1980 edition with Christe Brinkley on the cover. I clicked it and clicked through all 80 pages (she was in the middle 3 or 4). Anyway, there must have been 10 different advertisements for cigarettes, by far the biggest advertisers in the magazine. I wonder where the magazines got their money once cigarette companies were banned from all sporting events sporting magazines?
 
Here are some pictures of Captain Hook hooked and "Monk" Costanzo shooting. That issue of The National Billiard News is in the "Goldmine" that you can find on the AZB home page. Here it is:


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I think that's Cole Dickson in the first row behind the table.
 
Cool story. He captured the moment well. Monk was a huge underdog in the match with Sigel, especially since they moved it to a 9' table. After he made the final nine ball on the break, he actually fainted and fell to the floor.

What was really funny was that when Monk got down to shoot the long cut shot on the nine, it got deathly quiet in the room, with well over 500 people watching. Monk stood up, looked around and said, "It's too quiet in here." Everyone laughed. I think that calmed Monk down. Because then he got back down and made it.

One of the most amazing rolls I ever saw was when Sigel played back and forth position from the eight to the nine ball to win the match. The cue ball just kept rolling and corner hooked Mike on the point of the side pocket. He made a great safety, half masse'ing the cue ball to hit the edge of the nine ball and leave it very tough with distance.
And didn't Monk get his nickname from rarely speaking?
 
And didn't Monk get his nickname from rarely speaking?
I don't know the answer but I think I saw somewhere in that issue of National Billiard News from post #24 that he was referenced as "monkey". I don't know if that was an error, or the original/origin of his nickname, or something else.
 
If my memory serves me, Monk got the nickname, because he was an advocate of meditation. He used it to calm himself when under pressure.
 
Monk was short for monkey because he was a knuckle dragging, hairy looking dude. Last I heard he was having health issues living in Reno...

Jaden
 
Here are some pictures of Captain Hook hooked and "Monk" Costanzo shooting. That issue of The National Billiard News is in the "Goldmine" that you can find on the AZB home page. Here it is:


View attachment 616855

I think that's Cole Dickson in the first row behind the table.
Yep, that's Cole, leaning over with his arms on his legs. Monk was kind of his mentor in Pool. The bottom left photo shows Sigel shooting at the nine ball that he can only see half of. He makes an excellent safety and leaves Monk the shot on the upper right, a very long and thin cut shot. He slices that ball in and proceeds to make the nine on the break in the next game to win the match! Pretty big crowd there, well over 500 people.
 
Cool story. He captured the moment well. Monk was a huge underdog in the match with Sigel, especially since they moved it to a 9' table. After he made the final nine ball on the break, he actually fainted and fell to the floor.

What was really funny was that when Monk got down to shoot the long cut shot on the nine, it got deathly quiet in the room, with well over 500 people watching. Monk stood up, looked around and said, "It's too quiet in here." Everyone laughed. I think that calmed Monk down. Because then he got back down and made it.

One of the most amazing rolls I ever saw was when Sigel played back and forth position from the eight to the nine ball to win the match. The cue ball just kept rolling and corner hooked Mike on the point of the side pocket. He made a great safety, half masse'ing the cue ball to hit the edge of the nine ball and leave it very tough with distance.

Monk actually won $27,500 because there was a bonus pot that you had to pay $50 extra to get into. And Sigel got $11,000. There were no deals made in this final. Sigel was too big a favorite. Thirty years ago we had pay outs like this in pro pool thanks to Richie Florence. He followed this event with another one at the Tropicana the following year that Edgar "Shake 'N Bake" White won, beating "Little Al" Romero in the finals.

Then Richie went to Caesars and put on several more big money events, with first prizes in excess of 30K. What happened you might ask? Well, several of the top players in a moment of temporary insanity refused to sign the television releases (standard form for all athletes) and that put Richie out of business. Geniuses!

This final event was held at Caesars Palace in 1984 and Strickland won (25K) beating Terry Bell (12.5K) in the finals. Dallas West was third (7.5K) and I was the TD. The shows never aired on ESPN and Richie never put on another tournament. He put pro pool on national television (ESPN) and paid out top dollar prizes over twenty five years ago. Until the players put themselves out of business. By the way, Richie was NOT paying ESPN any production costs to put these shows on the air. It was all being done on their dime. I sat with Richie at the meeting where he made the deal to put these shows on TV. He was a darn good promoter and negotiator. He also had Budweiser and Caesars kicking in to the purse, over 30K added for each event.

I just thought you might like to know this little bit of background information. Pool had a great opportunity on television right here in the states a long, long time ago. But thanks to some "smart" thinking by pool players it all went up in a puff of smoke.
Bumping a 16 year old post. You can see at the end of the video a couple people are holding him. He fainted and apparently was being held up to keep him from dropping.
 
Bumping a 16 year old post. You can see at the end of the video a couple people are holding him. He fainted and apparently was being held up to keep him from dropping.
For those who were wondering, here is the video showing Sigel's self-hook and the rest. Start at 55:25 if the link doesn't take you there. Watch the next rack too -- it doesn't take long.


IIRC, I was watching from somewhere back along the left rail.
 
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For those who were wondering, here is the video showing Sigel's self-hook and the rest. Start at 55:25 if the link doesn't take you there. Watch the next rack too -- it doesn't take long.


IIRC, I was watching from somewhere back along the left rail.
You got some gems, Bob.
 
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For those who were wondering, here is the video showing Sigel's self-hook and the rest. Start at 55:25 if the link doesn't take you there. Watch the next rack too -- it doesn't take long.


IIRC, I was watching from somewhere back along the left rail.
What's funny is I've watched him do that at least 3 times in televised matches. I actually think of him every time the plus-2 type kick comes up.
 
Well, a recent post about a different Monk led me to look this up. Some of you may find this thread interesting. Of course SI has moved the article. SI has a really lousy interface, but it's free. Here is the article that I think was referenced in the OP:
...
Here's the article as a local PDF. I don't know why SI feels they have to hide it.
 

Attachments

The guy down in front with the white t-shirt and big sideburns that runs up to Monk is none other than the great Tulsa barbox monster Fat Randy Wallace.
 
For those who were wondering, here is the video showing Sigel's self-hook and the rest. Start at 55:25 if the link doesn't take you there. Watch the next rack too -- it doesn't take long.


IIRC, I was watching from somewhere back along the left rail.
Thanks Bob. To this day probably the most incredible finish I've ever seen to any pool tournament. It was like David vs. Goliath, and David killed Goliath here too. The magazine article was incorrect. The tourney was played on standard 7' bar tables and we only found out on the last day that the finals would be on a 9' table.

Don't think Monk couldn't play on a big table though. He was considered a top rated One Pocket player and playing one handed One Pocket was his specialty. Interestingly enough I had played Monk a year before (9-Ball) on a road trip to Las Vegas. We played at a poolroom in a strip mall on the outskirts of Vegas. I got off my 750 Honda Chopper after a long ride from Bakersfield (275 miles) and quickly found myself in action with him. I didn't know him and he didn't know me. That's how pool was back then. We played $20 9-Ball for maybe four or five hours and I was exhausted, more from the ride then the game. I doubt we were two games apart, but when I quit one of Monk's buddies threatened me for quitting winners. Truthfully I wasn't sure how we stood, I just know it was close. Monk calmed him down, and he and I have been friends ever since. We played in the same 20-40 Hold'em game at the Peppermill Casino several times. What a sweet game that was! We never let on we knew each other.

In the front row of that video, standing next to Fat Randy, I see Cornbread, David Howard, Jimmy Reid and Jimmy Marino at various times. In the crowd shots it is full of pool players. I was in the stands off to the left sitting by Ronnie and Richie. Greatest finish ever! Not even close.

P.S. David Rhodes (a good player from Oregon) knocked me out short of the money. It was Single Elimination.
 
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