I figured that since everyone else was writing about their U.S. Open experience I would also share mine. Why not, I was there for the whole thing, from beginning to end. I'm not too big on telling secrets. I'd rather say what I have to say to someone either directly or publicly. Anything I say here I would say to someone's face if I had the chance. Just like the things I had to say in Pool Wars. So none of this is meant to be a secret, it's just the way it was for me.
First of all, Mr. Behrman requested that Ken and I come several days early to assist in preparing the various rooms for the event. There were no "ballrooms" per se, with the largest banquet room at the hotel maybe 5,000 square feet. We used four separate rooms for the playing area, with one housing four tables (the TV arena), another one across the hall housing four more tables (the front room), a small room (originally to be called the Jay Helfert room) with two tables in it and finally the back room with six tables in it; sixteen tables total with matches going on most of them six rounds a day! And SOMEONE had to keep an eye on all these tables in the four separate rooms and make sure all was going well and on schedule with no problems. That was fun!
At first I didn't like the set-up with everything all spread out like that, a pretty good walk from the front two "arenas" to the back two. But when I saw the beautiful seating that was being created for this tournament to fit in each of those rooms (except the 'Jay Helfert' room), I began to see the possibilities. The rooms were small and intimate a nice setting for watching pool. The seating would afford everyone a good view of several matches at once. Sounds good so far, but then......the design of the cool looking seating was all done wrong. Whoever laid out the floor plan got the measurements fouled up and there was no room to get in or out from your seat once you were in. They also conveniently forgot to add enough aisles so it was hard to even enter the bleacher areas. It was BAD! And people weren't happy. It never ceases to amaze me how much hard core pool fans will put up with to see great pool being played.
Pt.1
First of all, Mr. Behrman requested that Ken and I come several days early to assist in preparing the various rooms for the event. There were no "ballrooms" per se, with the largest banquet room at the hotel maybe 5,000 square feet. We used four separate rooms for the playing area, with one housing four tables (the TV arena), another one across the hall housing four more tables (the front room), a small room (originally to be called the Jay Helfert room) with two tables in it and finally the back room with six tables in it; sixteen tables total with matches going on most of them six rounds a day! And SOMEONE had to keep an eye on all these tables in the four separate rooms and make sure all was going well and on schedule with no problems. That was fun!
At first I didn't like the set-up with everything all spread out like that, a pretty good walk from the front two "arenas" to the back two. But when I saw the beautiful seating that was being created for this tournament to fit in each of those rooms (except the 'Jay Helfert' room), I began to see the possibilities. The rooms were small and intimate a nice setting for watching pool. The seating would afford everyone a good view of several matches at once. Sounds good so far, but then......the design of the cool looking seating was all done wrong. Whoever laid out the floor plan got the measurements fouled up and there was no room to get in or out from your seat once you were in. They also conveniently forgot to add enough aisles so it was hard to even enter the bleacher areas. It was BAD! And people weren't happy. It never ceases to amaze me how much hard core pool fans will put up with to see great pool being played.
Pt.1
Last edited: