Quite a few of these, actually. Although I very rarely send it all in. 90% maybe, but I always leave myself money for the tab and bar and to live on.
Had to think about this one, because there's quite a few good ones. I decided on this one.
1986 ( I know this because it was when I really got into pool ). I was playing in the Sports Pad in downtown Greenville, NC where I was a sophomore at ECU. They had a "challenge table" in the center of the place where you had no choice but to play for whatever they were playing for and it was always eight ball. I had pretty much chased everyone off of the table and quit so I could sit back and wait for the players to build back up before I put back up. I had the bankroll built up to about $120? Hey, I was in college in the eighties. This wasn't that bad. This tall fellow had won about four in a row and so I thought it was time. They were betting $5 a game, now. That was big for that time and where I was.
So, I put up. I missed a ball, and kicked only once more. I put up again. I lost again. And again. Well, the ego got the best of me. "Bet ten and play some nineball." "Sure." Well, I get $50 more stuck. This guy was outplaying me and laying down (at the time I thought he was just missing balls). "Hey, I'll get Lenny or Joe Root to play you some." Now, I knew Lenny pretty well, but had no idea what Joe looked like. I just knew he played the best in Greenville. Yes, I was young and pulled the "my friend is better than you card." Boy, do we learn.
"I'll play either one of them. You just get'em here." So, I actually sprinted down to Happy's and grabbed Lenny by the arm. We walked back to the Sports Pad and I'm describing the guy the whole time. As we walk in, I hand Lenny $40. Well, he gets on the challenge table and plays for about a half hour and is broke.
"Later, Lenny."
"Later, Joe."
And, I'm pretty sure I saw them exchange a buck or two. Damn, do we learn. This was my first lesson in "information."
I beat Joe in the Brass Tap out of a little over a hundred betting on Little Tony and Hooker playing one pocket years later. I told him about that time I got, uh, well, beaten. He just laughed and said "lesson learned."
First idiot moves, not the last.
Had to think about this one, because there's quite a few good ones. I decided on this one.
1986 ( I know this because it was when I really got into pool ). I was playing in the Sports Pad in downtown Greenville, NC where I was a sophomore at ECU. They had a "challenge table" in the center of the place where you had no choice but to play for whatever they were playing for and it was always eight ball. I had pretty much chased everyone off of the table and quit so I could sit back and wait for the players to build back up before I put back up. I had the bankroll built up to about $120? Hey, I was in college in the eighties. This wasn't that bad. This tall fellow had won about four in a row and so I thought it was time. They were betting $5 a game, now. That was big for that time and where I was.
So, I put up. I missed a ball, and kicked only once more. I put up again. I lost again. And again. Well, the ego got the best of me. "Bet ten and play some nineball." "Sure." Well, I get $50 more stuck. This guy was outplaying me and laying down (at the time I thought he was just missing balls). "Hey, I'll get Lenny or Joe Root to play you some." Now, I knew Lenny pretty well, but had no idea what Joe looked like. I just knew he played the best in Greenville. Yes, I was young and pulled the "my friend is better than you card." Boy, do we learn.
"I'll play either one of them. You just get'em here." So, I actually sprinted down to Happy's and grabbed Lenny by the arm. We walked back to the Sports Pad and I'm describing the guy the whole time. As we walk in, I hand Lenny $40. Well, he gets on the challenge table and plays for about a half hour and is broke.
"Later, Lenny."
"Later, Joe."
And, I'm pretty sure I saw them exchange a buck or two. Damn, do we learn. This was my first lesson in "information."
I beat Joe in the Brass Tap out of a little over a hundred betting on Little Tony and Hooker playing one pocket years later. I told him about that time I got, uh, well, beaten. He just laughed and said "lesson learned."
First idiot moves, not the last.