NYC cue dude
Banned
Oh, and the Ursetti story is wrong. He ran like 350, then went for dinner and then came back and continued his run to around 600. He didn't run 600 and stop. It was NOT an unfinished, nor uninterrupted run.
I'm surprised no one mentioned this, especially Bobby C. Anyone who has played the game or has been around the most elite 14.1 players the world has ever seen will tell you that what Mosconi did was more difficult than the conditions being played on today. The nap had quite a bit to do with it, but the 8ft table had more. It is MORE difficult to have high runs on a smaller table than on a larger one. Between the slow cloth and smaller playing surface, twice as many balls are always get tied/clustered up.
I spoke to Thomas Engert, who ran 492, and he said the last 20 balls or so he was physically shaking, as he got closer to 500. Thorsten free wheeled himself out of a few jams including a 3 rail kick into a carom during his 404. These guys will tell you at that level, there's a lot of luck. And still, for the few in that rarified air of 400, they are still almost 75% of the way there.
Shane's run of 305 is strong. There quite a few living players who have done so. Go to the straight pool section forum and look at the list. Its ridiculous to think that if he decided to, he would run 526 in a month. I'd bet, not in his lifetime.
post #38 in this thread.
You have some great points here. I didn't get to detailed in post 38.This is Shanes time to shine and with a run of 305 he has earned it.
I got the sarcasm again here too, as did everyone else.
I am not speaking of equipment in general. John complained the most about the cloth, not that he was playing on a Diamond, or ridiculous pockets. 95% of the shots in straight pool, if played correctly, are 4' or less so, as I have already said, it does not matter as much in straight pool on the pocket size as it does the cloth. Slow cloth is a huge thing to overcome in getting huge high runs like that. Try it. Is it really that difficult to understand? And if someone today run 600 on Simonis, that is a great and awesome feat, but not as tough as 526 on slow cloth.
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I don't understand when people try to compare Mosconi to today's players, that was a different era. No doubt he is one of the greats but that does not mean that players today are any lesser of a player than him.
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm anybody up for some bingo?
Calling "O"............. Fook
I do not think you actually read my original response to him very closely, as I was responding to the sarcastic parroting he did of a very small few people who actually suggest that SVB is mostly just a break artist. It was a BS addition to the post as most people are on the exact same page as the OP, so the sarcastic little quip was unwarranted. "Almost" everyone on AZB knows that SVB can play and is not just a racking and breaking artist and the few trollish people who claim otherwise are better left un-baited into another dumb SVB flame thread.
If SVB runs a 300 great, post a thread about that. Stop trying to draw the bloody few people who claim SVB is all a break and rack artist into another argument. The whole original post was made to draw them right in with the sarcastic little quip FFS... Can we just discuss the run and not have a thread basically designed to become another argument on pattern racking and wing balls? That too much to ask?
All I know is I would bet that most players (myself included) could run more balls on an 8' table with 5" pockets and slow good cloth then they could on a 9' table with 4.5" pockets with fast cloth.
You can do so much more with position if you can cheat the pocket, with 5" pockets even if you get straight in you can get to just about anywhere on the table. As the pockets get tighter it takes away a lot of options when you are straight in or on the wrong side of a ball.
I understand that your break shot won't separate the rack as much but I have watched straight pool matches on slower cloth and the balls break up just fine if you hit the stack well.
Lots more "dead" balls in the stack when the pockets are bigger also being able to cheat the pockets allow you to come back into the stack to break other balls loose.
I know I will never be able to make big runs on any table, but I feel I could make bigger runs on a smaller table with big pockets and slow cloth. I am not planning on spending the money to prove my point though!
What is your high run?
There are plenty of videos of Mosconi doing his one rack showcasing straight pool and how easy it was. That cloth was anything but slow.
Larger pockets indeed have much more of an impact on straight pool than cloth speed. I also agree that slower cloth is easier to get high runs on
Sigel and Schmidt played a straight pool match on the IPT cloth, back when Schmidt was playing a lot of straight pool and putting up his big numbers.
The slow cloth murdered them both, the high runs in that match were way off of their normal level of play.
I think way to many people take WAY WAY WAY too much liberty in stating their opinion that Shane, or any other top pro, would easily beat 526 if there was a real monetary motivation.
Mosconi ran it in 1954. For the 50 yrs prior, and for at least 35 yrs after, straight pool was the main game.
In all those years, 85 at least, no one ran more than 526 (save for the unverified runs of 600s and possibly 800s).
Do you really think Shane, or Efren, or Schmidt, or Thorsten have more talent and work ethic than Mosconi did? They are all top pros. To say that they could beat 526 in a month, a year, perhaps even a lifetime, is ludicrous.
Siegel, Rempe, Fusco, Hall, Grady, Hopkins, none of those guys got close. And they played on both the old and the new cloths, again, when 14.1 was the main game
That run was the worst thing to ever happen to Mosconi. He was the best player to ever play straight pool, dominated the game for decades and was a multiple time world champ such as pool has not seen since, and all people ever talk about is the freaking 526. God forbid anyone ever beats the 526, everyone will forget Mosconi even existed. His high run overshadowed his far more impressive accomplishments, and that is sad as hell.
You forgot the best player of them all, the one who was trained by Mosconi, THE MIGHTY MIZ!
You forgot the best player of them all, the one who was trained by Mosconi, THE MIGHTY MIZ!