I really have trouble believing this. You were just using a little creative license with your statement, right?
I'm from the same room Corey grew up in in the Philly Burbs. There is lots of truth to what Superstar says. Corey, and even more so, Jimmy Fusco, are heroes here. Whatever they say or do, is GOSPEL, to the Philly rooms. If Jimmy told one of his followers to jump off a bridge, the follower would. That’s just the way it is. To not believe this, is naive. Our “hero” poolplayers have their idols, just like the rockstars. They even get “backstage perks” like the rockstars do, from the female groupies. I’m not making this up.
Our local Accustats bootlegger routinely sells out of 3 player’s matches: Fusco, Corey, and Efren, in that order. No other matches are even close.
I remember when our local bootlegger first got the Corey/Shannon onehole match. The whole room bought a copy of the match. The years blend together for me now, but I guess this was about 10 years ago. Anyway, almost all the one pocket players in our room (and our room was a big one hole room), tried fooling around with the break. Some took it more seriously than others, but almost everyone did it for a few days as a novelty.
All the players eventually gave up on it. The A players probably tried it once or twice, and saw how dumb it was and never tried it again. The B and C players were the one’s who fooled around with it the longest, for a week or two, before even they realized its risk is simply NOT worth the reward in the long run.
There was ONE player, however, who TILL THIS DAY, still uses the corey break. Now, this guy shoots JAM UP, like an open level player. But he is DUMB, DUMB, DUMB. He can’t beat anyone playing onehole or 9 ball, even strong B players. Yet, he INSISTS this break is good. Year after year I watch this guy play the room regulars, who range from B to Open players. He keeps using Corey’s break, and keeps selling it out half the time. He just never learns. And believe me when I say he has practiced this break tons, and he can do anything he wants with the cueball.
So here is an example, although extreme, of a player from the same room as Corey, idolizes Corey, copied his break, probably even hits it better than Corey does, and 10 years later still uses it, failing to ever win with it.