Earl and Lassiter may well be the two best nine-ballers ever.
The anecdote shared in the original post is an interesting one, for there is irony that Earl, who, along with Sammy Jones, popularized the jump shot (yes, I know they were not the first to jump!) in the early 1980's, came to hate the jump shot.
Earl, though not the player he once was, still finds his old gear on occasion, and that, added to the possibility of a train wreck, draws fans to his matches. I think that if Earl were to put a great run to win a tournament (and, let's face it, only a bad roll in the double rack of the final cost him the 2011 DCC One-pocket title), it might just be pool's equivalent of what Jack Nicklaus did at the 1986 Masters.
The anecdote shared in the original post is an interesting one, for there is irony that Earl, who, along with Sammy Jones, popularized the jump shot (yes, I know they were not the first to jump!) in the early 1980's, came to hate the jump shot.
Earl, though not the player he once was, still finds his old gear on occasion, and that, added to the possibility of a train wreck, draws fans to his matches. I think that if Earl were to put a great run to win a tournament (and, let's face it, only a bad roll in the double rack of the final cost him the 2011 DCC One-pocket title), it might just be pool's equivalent of what Jack Nicklaus did at the 1986 Masters.