Good points - but you couldn't run 200 in competition in the time when Mosconi, et al
were competing unless you were waaaay behind in a block format, or you started
the game by taking about 20 intentional scratches

. Would you agree that if there were a format
that accommodated it, Willie would have run 200 many times?
And several other players as well.
Dale
If the standard race in competition was to 1,000 in Willie's day, I believe he'd have run 1,000 and out somewhere along the way.
But again, Willie beat fields that were silly-strong. Jimmy Caras, Irving Crane, Joe Balsis, Eddie Kelly, Luther Lassiter, Babe Cranfield and other legends of straight pool were in his path year after year. That's what made Willie great.
Anyone who suggests that the fields of today are the toughest ever needs to be reminded of this:
Mike Sigel, who to me is the only player of our generation who can even be mentioned in the same breath as Mosconi, used to win his 14.1 titles against fields that were the toughest in the game's history. The fields in the late 1970's and early 1980's included the likes of Ray Martin, Allen Hopkins, Steve Mizerak, Dan DiLiberto, Irving Crane, Joe Balsis, Jim Rempe, Nick Varner, Lou Butera, Dallas West and Luther Lassiter. That's eleven future BCA Hall of Famers that Sigel had to contend with year after year....and there were plenty of other great players in those fields such as Frank McGown, Pete Margo, Dick Lane, Pat Fleming, Jack Colavita and Larry Lisciotti. Back then, there were guys who had run 150 and out in competition who couldn't even qualify for all of the biggest 14.1 events.
Thorsten Hohmann, the best 14.1 player of this generation by my assessment, is a maginificent player, but is not yet worthy of mention with the likes of Mosconi and Sigel. Of course, that could change depending on what he accomplishes before his competitive career is over.
Willie beat them all, time after time after time. Greenleaf, I'm told, did the same, and is rightfully celebrated.