The only thing they didn't take into account is there was one human pool player on this planet that could actually "rise to the occasion"......their odds were accurate, they were calculated by a statistician at SMU University here in Dallas. No one has run 11 straight racks in a professional tournament before Earl did it or after.....so the odds are correct.
No one else in the history of the sport could have done what Earl did on that day......it was "almost" impossible....of course my definition of "impossible" changed from that day forward.....now I know for sure anything's possible....and it is, - "where there's a will, there's always a way"......and such is life.
This subject has come up before ....I think the odds are incorrect.
I've said that the insurance company should've fired their statistician.
The odds of running a ten-pack change greatly when a large prize is put up.
In a normal competitive situation, every shot the first decision is whether
to go for it or play safe.....for a million$, the safety option disappears.
Therefore, more racks are gonna get run.
I DO think that it took a lot of heart to run them, and it takes a purist
like Earl, whose passion for the game exceeds monetary considerations,
to do the job.
A lot of player's heart would have exploded in the last three racks.
And kudos to you, CJ, for being stand-up for Earl all the way.