bruin70 said:i was just watching a dvd that had traffic clips of midtown manhattan, and i saw an "ames billiards" neon arrow sign pointing down a side street. i always thought ames was a fictitious room. i had heard of the other few rooms in midtown but not ames.
There was definitely an Ames. Don't remember exactly, but located somewhere around the Broadway and 42nd Street area. I hope that I'm not confusing Ames with the also famous 7/11 that was in the same general area. I believe that the parts of the Gleason/Newman movie, The Hustler, that took place in the poolroom were actually filmed in Ames. If I recall correctly, I believe that it was opened all night, was located one flight up, and was a real rathole, but filled with all the top money players and action at almost every table. Recall, when I was about 17 years old bringing a really good local player, Oscar, and about $150 up there, and as soon as we got to the top of the stairs we were approached by three or four challengers for some play. We must have thought Oscar was a secret weapon, don't even know who he played, but didn't care at the time. Started out playing about $20 a game and Oscar was shooting great, not missing anything makeable and making it look easy, pretty quickly went to $60 - $75 per taking side bets and must have been up about $500 pretty quickly UNTIL Oscar realized how much he was playing for (he was a local $2-$5 player) and just fell apart. By the time we quit, we left with maybe twenty bucks, enough to get a bite and get home.bruin70 said:i was just watching a dvd that had traffic clips of midtown manhattan, and i saw an "ames billiards" neon arrow sign pointing down a side street. i always thought ames was a fictitious room. i had heard of the other few rooms in midtown but not ames.
bruin70 said:i was just watching a dvd that had traffic clips of midtown manhattan, and i saw an "ames billiards" neon arrow sign pointing down a side street. i always thought ames was a fictitious room. i had heard of the other few rooms in midtown but not ames.
Nostroke said:Im not from that Era (pool wise) but sometime ago i heard that McGirrs, Ames or 7-11 was not 3 different rooms-only 2. One of them became the other-not sure which.
Jude Rosenstock said:... Sometimes I wish I was born 50 years earlier.
manwon said:Anyone have any photo's of the inside of Ames Billiards?
If so please post them.
Craig
jay helfert said:You know, I played all around NYC in the mid 60's and don't remember ever going into or seeing Ames. It may have been there but no one was talking about it.
All the action was in 7-11 and Guys and Dolls (on 50th St.). Other places I remember playing in were McGirrs (downstairs) and Broadway Billiards. They were the main four rooms in midtown Manhattan. Julians was further uptown and mostly for Straight Pool players.
The top players were in 7-11 every day. Jersey Red, Johnny Ervolino, Boston Shorty, New York Blackie and Richie from the Bronx. Also Johnny Irish was in there and Boston Joey. NO ONE ever came in there and got out with the money.
A better spot for shortstops like me was Guys and Dolls. Many good players in here (Pancho, White Cannonball, Little Frankie - a great 14 year old hustler, Country) but also many suckers. I used to gamble with Jerry The Actor, who later became Jerry Orbach, the famous actor on TV. He loved to play and was only average.
McGirrs was a rougher spot (mostly blacks) where you could get robbed. I went in and played some black guy Banks and he beat me. I was done with that spot.
Broadway was not a players room, more for businessman and students. I don't remember ever getting action there, although I tried. I even went up to Julians a couple of times but had no luck finding a game. Everyone wanted to play 14.1.
jimmyg said:Actually, Julians was downtown from those others, on 14th Street on the same block as the Academy of Music movie theater, on the East Side, maybe near Third Avenue. Lots of tables, including Snooker and billiards, lots of straight pool as well as quite a bit of nine ball action. Julians was the home room of he late George Makula (326 ball run at Chelsea) and I recall a pretty good nine ball player named Prince gambling every time I was there.
Do you remember whether it Ames or 7-11 that was upstairs? I think Ames, but not certain.
jay helfert said:The top players were in 7-11 every day. Jersey Red, Johnny Ervolino, Boston Shorty, New York Blackie and Richie from the Bronx. Also Johnny Irish was in there and Boston Joey. NO ONE ever came in there and got out with the money.
A better spot for shortstops like me was Guys and Dolls. Many good players in here (Pancho, White Cannonball, Little Frankie - a great 14 year old hustler, Country) but also many suckers. I used to gamble with Jerry The Actor, who later became Jerry Orbach, the famous actor on TV. He loved to play and was only average.
Tommy Joe said:What about Tom Cosmo, where was he playing back then? Or was he already in L.A...?
Tommy Joe
gulfportdoc said:I Don't recall the name of the place, but I think Annigoni wrote about it in his book.
Doc
jay helfert said:The top players were in 7-11 every day. Jersey Red, Johnny Ervolino, Boston Shorty, New York Blackie and Richie from the Bronx. Also Johnny Irish was in there and Boston Joey. NO ONE ever came in there and got out with the money.
PoolBum said:Jay, I've heard about the legendary lineup in NY at that time. How would you rate those guys against each other? Did they ever match up?