SJM at the Las Vegas Open

sjm

Older and Wiser
Silver Member
Just got home from five days of sweating the Las Vegas Open at the Westgate Hotel in Vegas. I was impressed.

Overview
The field quality in the singles was uniformly high, with nearly all the stars of rotation pool on hand, although Yapp and FSR missed the event due to the Matchroom PLP in Florida.

Even though I hate shootouts, I like the best of three races to four format and, thankfully, very few critical matches were decided by shootout.

In the Men’s Event, Filler was the story. It seemed the pool gods had it in for him when his path to the title included three world champions in Biado, SVB and Gorst, but he beat all three of them and won the title. The first set of the final between Filler and Gorst was a dandy, and Fedor made two different bank shots at double hill to win the set. Unfortunately, what looked like a good one became a dud as Filler won the next eight racks to secure the title.

In the women’s event, thing were very competitive, and a couple of surprises landed both Mast and Zlateva in the quarterfinals. with Zlateva making it to the semis. Wei, Centeno, Ouschan and Tkach were the ones showing the best form, but it was Wei and Centeno reaching the final, with Wei scoring an impressive victory.

In the mixed doubles, Josh and Pia Filler had to beat the super-strong team of Carlo Biado and Han Yu in the first round, but after getting past them, they cruised to the title.

I was there for just day one of the team event, but I have to say that I found it electrifying. The team of three matches, each featuring two men and one woman, offered great entertainment. Germany (Filler, Neuhausen, Filler) was hoping to defend, but much work lay ahead for them when I left Vegas. Josh Filler was in search of the almost inconceivable trifecta of winning the singles, the mixed doubles and the teams. I’ll believe it when I see it!

I’ll still take a Matchroom 9ball major over 10ball any day of the week, but I like what I am seeing from Predator and, before I left, I gave Karim some positive feedback and thanked him for a great event.

On a separate note …..

Savannah Showing Some Development
She is still the second best female American teen behind Sofia Mast, who came fifth in the singles, but I saw some things I liked from sixteen-year-old Savannah Easton, who has, undeniably, been an elite ball-pocketer since she was fourteen. I noted in a post of a few months ago that her pattern play is better than it was a year ago, but now I am seeing the first signs of some tactical development in her game. Relative to the many teen phenoms I have watched over the years (examples include Siming Chen, Han Yu, Loree Jon Jones, Jean Balukas, Jasmin Ouschan, Monica Webb and Ga Young Kim), Savannah’s progress has been slow, but I am encouraged by what I am seeing. Savannah is certainly not a contender at the majors yet, but she is moving forward. Top 25 in the world (as measured by Fargo rate) might be a reachable goal by age eighteen. I wish her every possible success in 2026 and beyond.

Socially
I caught up with way too many players and friends to name, but it was great to catch up with the pool gang as always.

Conclusion
If you never been to the Las Vegas Open, I hope that one day you get the chance. It is something special.
 
Just got home from five days of sweating the Las Vegas Open at the Westgate Hotel in Vegas. I was impressed.

Overview
The field quality in the singles was uniformly high, with nearly all the stars of rotation pool on hand, although Yapp and FSR missed the event due to the Matchroom PLP in Florida.

Even though I hate shootouts, I like the best of three races to four format and, thankfully, very few critical matches were decided by shootout.

In the Men’s Event, Filler was the story. It seemed the pool gods had it in for him when his path to the title included three world champions in Biado, SVB and Gorst, but he beat all three of them and won the title. The first set of the final between Filler an dGorst was a dandy, and Fedor made two different bank shots at double hill to win the set. Unfortunately, what looked like a good one became a dud as Filler won the next eight racks to secure the title.

In the women’s event, thing were very competitive, and a couple of surprises landed both Mast and Zlateva in the quarterfinals. With Zlateva making it to the semis. Wei, Centeno, Ouschan and Tkach were the ones showing the best form, but it was Wei and Centeno reaching the final, with Wei scoring an impressive victory.

In the mixed doubles, Josh and Pia Filler had to beat the super-strong team of Carlo Biado and Han Yu in the first round, but after getting past them, they cruised to the title.

I was there for just day one of the team event, but I have to say that I found it electrifying. The team of three matches, each featuring two men and one woman, offered great entertainment. Germany (Filler, Neuhausen, Filler) was hoping to defend, but much work lay ahead for them when I left Vegas. Josh Filler was in search of the almost inconceivable trifecta of winning the singles, the mixed doubles and the teams. I’ll believe it when I see it!

I’ll still take a Matchroom 9ball major over 10ball any day of the week, but I like what I am seeing from Predator and, before I left, I gave Karim some positive feedback and thanked him for a great event.

On a separate note …..

Savannah Showing Some Development
She is still the second best female American teen behind Sofia Mast, who came fifth in the singles, but I saw some things I liked from sixteen-year-old Savannah Easton, who has, undeniably, been an elite ball-pocketer since she was fourteen. I noted in a post of a few months ago that her pattern play is better than it was a year ago, but now I am seeing the first signs of some tactical development in her game. Relative to the many teen phenoms I have watched over the years (examples include Siming Chen, Han Yu, Loree Jon Jones, Jean Balukas, Jasmin Ouschan, Monica Webb and Ga Young Kim), Savannah’s progress has been slow, but I am encouraged by what I am seeing. Savannah is certainly not a contender at the majors yet, but she is moving forward. Top 25 in the world (as measured by Fargo rate) might be a reachable goal by age eighteen. I wish her every possible success in 2026 and beyond.

Socially
I caught up with way too many players and friends to name, but it was great to catch up with the pool gang as always.

Conclusion
If you never been to the Las Vegas Open, I hope that one day you get the chance. It is something special.
I’ve been watch Savannah in all of her matches. She has digressed from where she was months ago. I contribute a lot to her body language. Her shoulders, body and facial expressions are not positive. It’s almost like she has a poor me’ attitude. Just an observation from a 79 year old who’s been around pool and golf since I was 13 and I know when a player has that defeated look. My father’s remedy towards was a kick in the ass. It’s not available by prescription or over the counter. I also wonder if she ever takes a break or has other interest or are her parents pushing her to hard and two fast. Many a child prodigy has suffered from burnout.
 
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I’ve been watch Savannah in all of her matches. She has digressed from where she was months ago. I contribute a lot to her body language. Hate shoulders, body and facial expressions are not positive. It’s almost like she has a poor me’ attitude. Just an observation from a 79 year old who’s been around pool and golf since I was 13 and I know when a player has that defeated look. My father’s remedy towards was a kick in the ass. It’s not available by prescription or over the counter.
Kind of agree about her body language and, as I noted, her progress is slow relative to many of the teenaged phenoms I've seen over the years. Still, as a technician, she has progressed. She has become a bit more patient at the table, gaining with defense a little more often, and her patterns have improved. She's not yet elite, but you need to look closer if you don't see any development here.

Like AJ Manas on the men's side, Savannah needs to avoid reading her press clippings. Neither has accomplished much at pool's majors, but you'd never know it from reading their headlines.
 
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I’ve been watch Savannah in all of her matches. She has digressed from where she was months ago. I contribute a lot to her body language. Her shoulders, body and facial expressions are not positive. It’s almost like she has a poor me’ attitude. Just an observation from a 79 year old who’s been around pool and golf since I was 13 and I know when a player has that defeated look. My father’s remedy towards was a kick in the ass. It’s not available by prescription or over the counter. I also wonder if she ever takes a break or has other interest or are her parents pushing her to hard and two fast. Many a child prodigy has suffered from burnout.
And her posts are almost always "I didn't do this so xyz won." Rarely if ever does she offer a compliment without excuses.
 
I’ve been watch Savannah in all of her matches. She has digressed from where she was months ago. I contribute a lot to her body language. Her shoulders, body and facial expressions are not positive. It’s almost like she has a poor me’ attitude. Just an observation from a 79 year old who’s been around pool and golf since I was 13 and I know when a player has that defeated look. My father’s remedy towards was a kick in the ass. It’s not available by prescription or over the counter. I also wonder if she ever takes a break or has other interest or are her parents pushing her to hard and two fast. Many a child prodigy has suffered from burnout.
Her parents using social media to monetize every aspect of her existence is not helping any.
 
I think most are just jealous a 16 year old girl plays better than they do. Haters gonna hate
Maybe, but I think it is more about her not yet being elite but being written about and treated as such. In my initial post, I tried, objectively, to take note of some positive things I saw in Las Vegas regarding her development as a player. Even if she's not yet elite, what's wrong with celebrating her progress?
 
Kind of agree about her body language and, as I noted, her progress is slow relative to many of the teenaged phenoms I've seen over the years. Still, as a technician, she has progressed. She has become a bit more patient at the table, gaining with defense a little more often, and her patterns have improved. She's not yet elite, but you need to look closer if you don't see any development here.

Like AJ Manas on the men's side, Savannah needs to avoid reading her press clippings. Neither has accomplished much at pool's majors, but you'd never know it from reading their headlines.
With a little talent and work it's easy to progress when you're young. You see it in high school athletes all the time. Then they get to college where there's a few dozen other athletes just as good as them they discover they're not that special.
 
I’ve been watch Savannah in all of her matches. She has digressed from where she was months ago. I contribute a lot to her body language. Her shoulders, body and facial expressions are not positive. It’s almost like she has a poor me’ attitude. Just an observation from a 79 year old who’s been around pool and golf since I was 13 and I know when a player has that defeated look. My father’s remedy towards was a kick in the ass. It’s not available by prescription or over the counter. I also wonder if she ever takes a break or has other interest or are her parents pushing her to hard and two fast. Many a child prodigy has suffered from burnout.
Burnout without even being a prodigy is extremely possible, I'd bet my next paycheck she's burnt out. Does this mean she doesn't love pool and it isn't her dream? Not at all, but I also see her body language and it's been more negative lately.

I played competitive sports my whole life until I aged out, football being my main thing. I was burned out on football by the time I was 14. Since age 8 (when they first allowed you to play tackle ball) til 18 my whole life revolved around football. Weight training, game footage, practice, playing games, travel for practice and games. Between all of that, I didn't have a minute for anything else in life. Off season meant I was in the gym 5 days a week, even if I wasn't lifting, I was with coaches or therapists.

By the time I was 17, I had spoken with a few big name coaches for colleges, and had some offers most called me foolish to turn down. I was invited every year for the Wisconsin Badgers camp from 15-18. The positive side to eating, breathing, and sleeping football from 8-18 meant I was one of the better highschool lineman in the country or on my way to it. The downside was I absolutely hated football before I even set foot on a college campus. By the time I was getting interest from colleges, I was sick of football. I was sick of not having a life outside of football, and staring down the barrel of minimum 4 hard more years, lets be honest, 4 of the hardest years of football of my life? I wanted no part of that.

I saw all of my friends doing everything I couldn't do, because before I was an adult, my whole life was committed to football. At one point, I thought that's what I wanted, but as I aged I realized the odds of even making it to an NFL practice squad was slim, getting college offers happened, but by the time they did, I was already fed up with the sport and accumulated numerous injuries that I still deal with today. Honestly, if I could go back and do it all over again, I wouldn't play football.

I am not saying any of this is going to happen to her, but I definitely understand how fast you can burnout even if what you're pursuing is your dream. If something consumes your life, it's probably also going to make it miserable at some point.
 
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