Trip report: I traveled all the way to China to play in a Heyball Masters Tour event

kingwang

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
I just got back from a two week trip in China to play in the latest JOY Billiard's Heyball Masters Tour event. It was an all expenses paid trip, my first time playing in an international competition, and a completely eye opening experience.

The quick summary
  • The events in China are massive: the Tour stop is comprised of two tournaments. The one I played in had over 700 entries. The combined prize pool was $1M+ USD 🤯
  • No expenses spared: huge arenas, extravagant opening ceremony, hundreds of staffers, ~60 tables, 40+ refs on duty
  • People really, really like pool in China. Star players even had sponsorships with non-pool brands, like coconut waters and energy drinks. There were twice as many pool halls as gyms in the cities I went to
  • As expected, the Chinese players are incredibly strong. There were also so many talented youngsters
  • I went two and out. Got matched up with a top 30 player in my second round match. Team USA went a combined 2-10 between the five of us.
For those of you with longer attention spans, I posted a pool focused write-up about the entire experience here.

 
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I'm not surprised. I remember my first excursion into China and seeing huge poolrooms packed full with players. That was over ten years ago. On another note I think they should have left the name as Chinese Eight Ball. Heyball doesn't do anything for me. And the Chinese typically want their name plastered everywhere. They are usually fanatical about that.
 
I just got back from a two week trip in China to play in the latest JOY Billiard's Heyball Masters Tour event. It was an all expenses paid trip, my first time playing in an international competition, and a completely eye opening experience.

The quick summary
  • The events in China are massive: the Tour stop is comprised of two tournaments. The one I played in had over 700 entries. The combined prize pool was $1M+ USD 🤯
  • No expenses spared: huge arenas, extravagant opening ceremony, hundreds of staffers, ~60 tables, 40+ refs on duty
  • People really, really like pool in China. Star players even had sponsorships with non-pool brands, like coconut waters and energy drinks. There were twice as many pool halls as gyms in the cities I went to
  • As expected, the Chinese players are incredibly strong. There were also so many talented youngsters
  • I went two and out. Got matched up with a top 30 player in my second round match
For those of you with longer attention spans, I posted a pool focused write-up about the entire experience here.

Thanks very much for sharing your experience. I've been to China and I've seen what you're talking about. I'm an ex patriot living in South Korea so trips to China are very inexpensive. Thanks very much for sharing your experience. I imagine the first time you see it. It is pretty eye-opening.

Criag
 
I'm not surprised. I remember my first excursion into China and seeing huge poolrooms packed full with players. That was over ten years ago. On another note I think they should have left the name as Chinese Eight Ball. Heyball doesn't do anything for me. And the Chinese typically want their name plastered everywhere. They are usually fanatical about that.
Everything in Asia is about saving face (personal pride) so yeah, I can understand that the competitors would want their faces plastered on every wall possible.

Thanks for sharing your experience. I enjoyed reading it..
 
two and out is rough. any match go close?

and had you practiced on those tables before the trip?

I had, but only twice. I got notice that I was going only two weeks before leaving. I had played Heyball competitively before and did well.

My first match was competitive and I played well but my opponent simply played better. The second match I got matched with one of the 30 best players in all of China and that was not competitive at all. As a 630 Fargo, I had expected not to make it very far (but one can always dream!)
 
I had, but only twice. I got notice that I was going only two weeks before leaving. I had played Heyball competitively before and did well.

My first match was competitive and I played well but my opponent simply played better. The second match I got matched with one of the 30 best players in all of China and that was not competitive at all. As a 630 Fargo, I had expected not to make it very far (but one can always dream!)
Congrats on even making the effort. Thanks for the report. Hope that you had a good time and picked up some valuable info?
 
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