SmoothStroke said:
I am just curious on how many World Titles Mr. 40,000 holds in straight pool. Great shots are great shots,
Class and humble sounds something like this. Cranes shot was great, I thank you all for even associating my name with his.
100 times harder than Cranes shot? Typical bush league poll hall mentality.
SmoothStroke,
Thanks for defending Irving Crane. He will always be remembered as a great, great player as well as a perfect gentleman.
As for John Schmidt, personally, I think now that the 14.1 World Championship tournaments seem to be reviving, the chances are very good that he'll win some more titles before all is said and done. He can't win titles in tournaments that don't exist. I think the major difference between Crane & Schmidt is longevity, which brings a certain amount of knowledge with it.
Here is a little clip from a post I wrote the other day on Irving Crane's longevity, something that in all probability, will never be equaled....
Irving Crane won his 1st World 14.1 Championship in 1942! He was runner-up in 1937 & 1941 before he won his 6 World 14.1 Championships (1942-1946-1955-1968-1970-1972)! In other words, Irving Crane won WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS in 4 different decades and was competing in World 14.1 Championships in 6 decades (1930's - 1980's). The only other player to have ever won World Championships in pocket billiards over 4 different decades was Alfredo DeOro.
To properly put his greatness into perspective.....John Schmidt won his 14.1 World Championship in 2003. Oliver Ortmann won it in 2007. To have the consistancy and longevity that Irving Crane had, both of them must still be winning World Championships into the 2030's, when John will be in his 60's and Oliver in his 70's!
One more thing...Crane had as his contemporaries Ralph Greenleaf, Frank Taberski, Jimmy Caras, Erwin Rudolph, Willie Mosconi, Joe Balsis, Luther Lassiter, Cicero Murphy, Ed Kelly, Dallas West and Ray Martin, among others. These are only the 14.1 specialists, it doesn't count all the 9 ball greats who also entered some of the later championships.
Today, the 14.1 specialists consist of the elite John Schmidt, Oliver Ortmann, Ralf Souquet, Thomas Engert, Danny Harriman, Min Wai Chin and Thorsten Hohmann. Most of the others who enter the recently revived 14.1 World Championships are fledgling straight pool players.
My bottom line is that even though guys like Irving Crane are now out of sight, lets not keep them out of mind.
As a final point, I believe John Schmidt would have had more World Championships if there had been more tournaments in his lifetime. Since he's not played in as many as Crane and company, his knowledge and experience has to be behind Crane's. But the more he plays, the more dangerous he'll become. And he's already a "bad man" at 14.1!