Hi everyone,
I have just arrived in Taipei Taiwan a few days ago. I am still recovering from my jet lag and trying to get used to the extremly hot and wet weather here.
The people here are so very friendly and helpful I think I am going to enjoy myself despite the weather.
I went to one of the local tour stop for the Taiwanese tour two days ago. I saw Fong Pang Chao and a lot of the top professionals. There was a TV crew there reporting the match. Before the tournamet, they had Chao, Jennifer Chen, and two representatives from the governament to do an official break on TV. The mayor of Taipei was also in attendence. There were lots of interviews on TV before and during the tournament.
The poolhall which the tournament was held also had an in-house professional pool commentator, his name is Simon Chang(spelling might be wrong).
The tournament was very professionally conducted with referee and a very well behaved and knowledgable crowd. No one was running or walking in front of the players and everyone was very quiet. The poolhall had no bar or restaurant--it was a poolhall built for serious players who want to play pool in a professional setting. I was very impressed.
Later on, someone told me now students can choose pool as one of their curriculums in high school. A lot of students are now choosing pool over other sports and they are being trained at a very young age.
When I watched TV at night, I saw a live coverage of pool between a very young player, whom I believe to be Wu, against Yang, who is the no.1 player in Taiwan right now I believe. I have just arrived and I could be wrong with the names, to my knowledge, I believe Wu beat Yang in that match.
I have visited a few poolhalls. They are all 24 hours and they are so closely located. I went to a highrise building. At the elevator, I saw signs of four poolhalls in the same building! Two of the poolhalls are located right next to each other and one belongs to Mr. Tu.
I will try to post some pictures later if possible. I need to figure out my ways around the city first.
Richard
I have just arrived in Taipei Taiwan a few days ago. I am still recovering from my jet lag and trying to get used to the extremly hot and wet weather here.
The people here are so very friendly and helpful I think I am going to enjoy myself despite the weather.
I went to one of the local tour stop for the Taiwanese tour two days ago. I saw Fong Pang Chao and a lot of the top professionals. There was a TV crew there reporting the match. Before the tournamet, they had Chao, Jennifer Chen, and two representatives from the governament to do an official break on TV. The mayor of Taipei was also in attendence. There were lots of interviews on TV before and during the tournament.
The poolhall which the tournament was held also had an in-house professional pool commentator, his name is Simon Chang(spelling might be wrong).
The tournament was very professionally conducted with referee and a very well behaved and knowledgable crowd. No one was running or walking in front of the players and everyone was very quiet. The poolhall had no bar or restaurant--it was a poolhall built for serious players who want to play pool in a professional setting. I was very impressed.
Later on, someone told me now students can choose pool as one of their curriculums in high school. A lot of students are now choosing pool over other sports and they are being trained at a very young age.
When I watched TV at night, I saw a live coverage of pool between a very young player, whom I believe to be Wu, against Yang, who is the no.1 player in Taiwan right now I believe. I have just arrived and I could be wrong with the names, to my knowledge, I believe Wu beat Yang in that match.
I have visited a few poolhalls. They are all 24 hours and they are so closely located. I went to a highrise building. At the elevator, I saw signs of four poolhalls in the same building! Two of the poolhalls are located right next to each other and one belongs to Mr. Tu.
I will try to post some pictures later if possible. I need to figure out my ways around the city first.
Richard