dmgwalsh said:picture of Cannonball with Denny Keehan
mosconiac said:I'd like to hear the story behind this pic if not stories in general about Cannonball. Love the raised theater seating and that 6-leg table.
dmgwalsh said:Jim Parker from the Illinois Billiard Club just sent me the picture. He sent it to me to give to Denny, the little guy in the picture. He then started talking to me about how good Cannonball was.
The pictures are from one of the old locations of the Illinois Billiard Club ( http://www.illinoisbilliardclub.com/) . We still have the seating, and we recently converted that 6 legged ten foot table back to a billiards table. Here is the place now.
I'm sure Jim has many stories but he is too busy to do much online. We are starting our 34th Anniversary straight pool league next week with 24 contenders so far, and we may get a 3 cushion league going if we get enough interest.
jay helfert said:Yep, that's JC circa late 60's or early 70's. Man could he bank them balls. Like Houdini. And at warp speed too. He was just under Taylor and Bugs. Maybe a hair is all. Actually he banked just as good as either one, but he refused to play safe and fired at anything he could see. So his game was not as strong as someone who would duck once in a while.
Johhny loved to show off and make those impossible banks. He played all games too, even 14.1. In the 50's I heard he had an open challenge to anyone. I played him in Dayton in the 9-Ball tourney one year and won 11-9. He was genuinely happy for me, because I played good on him. He was past his peak by then.
Johnny was kind of a lost soul, who never seemed to settle anywhere. Just kind of wandered alone from place to place. I think he was originally from the Riverside, California area. He spent a lot of time around there and in Glendale, Ca. He moved around a lot, but mostly on the West Coast.
frankncali said:What a room!!!
Where is this located?
ragbug74 said:For those that are unfamiliar with the Illinois Billiard Club, I strongly encourage you to check the link posted above by DMGWALSH and read about its history. I was fortunate enough to drop by one day while Jim Parker was there doing some maintenance work. He was more than happy to take time to visit with myself and a few buddies, as well as show us around the club. It's been several years since I've been there (just the one time), but if it were closer to my home, I'd definitely be a member. They have a great collection of antique tables (that are still in-use) as well as tons of memorabilia. They have a display case on the wall with a considerable amount of Burton Spain memorabilia including cues in all various stages of construction. Really neat, unique pieces of billiard/pool history.
dmgwalsh said:It's in Willow Springs Illinois. Anyone interested in stopping by, feel free to pm me and I will help arrange it. It's a private club but members are encouraged to bring non-member guests in.
jay helfert said:Johnny was kind of a lost soul, who never seemed to settle anywhere. Just kind of wandered alone from place to place. I think he was originally from the Riverside, California area. He spent a lot of time around there and in Glendale, Ca. He moved around a lot, but mostly on the West Coast.
Scott Lee said:Jay...Cannonball was ALWAYS in Chicago when the U.S. Open was being held there, at the Sheraton Hotel. I saw him numerous times, just hanging around sweating the tournament (usually with a bottle of something...). This was in the early 70's, so I don't know if that's the same time frame as when you played him in Dayton or not.
Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com
George Fels said:OK, I'll be your old-timer: he was one of the two best black players ever produced in Chicago, and I would give him the nod over Bugs. Johnny was better than ANYBODY at creating banks where there were no natural angles; he had six or eight different strokes and no one else could "bend" the balls that way. As for just playing the game and winning it, most thought that "Youngblood" Washington, who at one time actually went to Knoxville and beat Eddie Taylor in his home room, was generally regarded as holding a slight edge over Chapman. GF
jay helfert said:Is he really from Chicago? He always told me he grew up in Riverside, CA. At the end of his string, he was still hustling bar pool in the Riverside area in the 80's and maybe into the early 90's.
JC was a funny character though.