What Was the Match of the Year in 2014?

sjm

Older and Wiser
Silver Member
As the smoke settles on another year of pro pool, I like to consider the matter of what the best match of 2014 was. Predictably, I can only select from matches I saw and invite others to chime in with their match of the year candidates.

1. January 2014: Dechaine beats Van Boening at the Derby City 9-ball
Nobody expected it when Dechaine beat Shane 9-2 in the Derby City 9-ball in 2013, and some figured that Shane would surely get revenge when he drew Dechaine again in the 2014 Derby City 9-ball. Most, however, figured it would be quite a match, and indeed it was. Very well played by both, it went back and forth, with America's two biggest breakers and two best players dominating with their breaks. Mike ultimately beat Shane double hill in a thriller. It may have been just what Shane needed, however, as Shane won, I believe, his next eight or nine matches to win the event.

2. January: Shannon Daulton beats Scott Frost at the Derby City One Pocket
Efren Reyes already owned the hot seat and Scott Frost and Shannon Daulton played each other for the other spot in the final. I'm sure I wasn't alone in predicting that Frost would win and give the fans an almost unimprovable matchup in the final. Apparently, nobody advised Shannon Daulton of the script. Shannon, with an almost unfathomable display of long banking, was up to the task and beat Frost in a truly memorable match.

3. January: Derby City Bank Pool Ring Game
If you were there or even if you watched it on stream, you'll never forget it. Sky Woodward put on a show for the ages and eventually found himself eye-to-eye with Bustamante as they fought for the $6,000 first prize. Bustamante was great, Woodward was even better. When the smoke had cleared, Woodward, who ran three different sixes along the way, had bested Bustamante. Freddie the Beard called it the best banking he'd seen in his life, a life which very sadly expired about four months later, robbing us all of the face of bank pool.

4. July: JL Chang beats Dennis Orcullo 21-18 at the CSI 9-ball Exhibition
CSI put this match together as an exhibition during the BCAPL National Championships and, as usual, CSI came up big. JL Chang dominated this match early but Orcullo made a furious comeback to tie it at 13. Orcullo kept the heat on and charged to a lead of 18-15, but a misplayed safety on the one ball brought JL Chang back to the table. Chang then ran six racks and out to win it 21-18. Wow!

5. August: Darren Appleton beats Van Boening to win the Dragon 14.1 Event
The emergence of Shane as a real force in 14.1 was undeniable after he had eliminated Johnny Archer by 200-10 by running 74 and then 126. Darren, who had run 200 and out in the semifinals of the 2013 event before falling to Hohmann, surely knew he'd have to be on his game to beat the red hot Shane, who was as much the story of the event as Darren himself. As he did a year ago, Darren produced a Sunday gem, running 69 and then 131 to win 200-28. This is surely a case of a match that was great only in the sense of how memorable it was.

6. September: Team England beats Team Netherlands to win the World Cup of Pool Final
Certainly not the best played matched of the year, but possibly the most exciting. Team Netherlands (Feijen and Vandenberg) controlled things for most of the match but England (Appleton and Boyes) stayed close and fought hard to get to double hill. It looked like Appleton's scratch on the break at double hill would prove fatal, but Team Netherlands failed to run out, with Feijen missing the eight. Boyes missed, too, but got away with it and England prevailed. A case can be made that neither team deserved to win, but the drama was simply incredible for anyone lucky enough to be watching at the time.

7. October: Dechaine beats Bustamante to reach the final four of the US Open
Mike came out on fire, but once Bustamante got his openings, his play was outstanding and he raced out to an 8-6 lead. Mike, it turned out had something left in the tank and played superbly to win the double hill contest. Still, as I've asked before, if a match finishes at 2:30 AM, did it really happen?

8. October: Van Boening beats Orcullo to win the US Open final
Orcullo shoots a 1.000 accu-stats for the first nine racks to gain a 6-3 lead, but when Shane's chances came, he went into overdrive and played some of the best pool I've ever seen. Dennis was brilliant in this one, but not nearly as brilliant as Van Boening, the deserving 13-10 winner.

What was best? For me, it's match #8, followed by Match #3 and then Match #4. What was your favorite?
 
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Rodney - Orcullo was at the CSI events in July 2013

The most talked about match in July 2014 was Souquet coming back to beat Orcullo after Orcullo scratched on an apparrent run out and then flew the cue ball off the table on his next break. Surprised this didn't make your list SJM.

SVB winning third straight US Open and coming back to do so, is it for me. Bergman beating Biado (also not on your list) would be second.
 
Great thread! All excellent matches....

My favorite by far was #8 the US open final. the drama and intensity of every shot in that match was amazing. The background with Shane ready to break history with three in a row, and Dennis ready to take the title from him had something the great boxing matches of yesteryear had. Shane and Dennis have some amazing performances with clutch shots that had me standing and cheering.

Another runner-up....

Earl strickland and Francisco Bustamante at the Accu-stats 8 ball invitational. You and I were there watching it live, as these two guys ran out from everywhere on the table. Earls drama with the audience kept the intensity going which lead to that magical shot to break out the cluster and get shape on a crucial rack. (Even highlighted in this month's billiards digest). Earl had to win to get a chance at a tie breaker, but Bustamante held strong and fought to hill hill where he won out after earl tried for one more magical shot but missed. One of the best pool spectator experiences I have ever had the pleasure to be part of.
 
The most talked about match in July 2014 was Souquet coming back to beat Orcullo after Orcullo scratched on an apparrent run out and then flew the cue ball off the table on his next break. Surprised this didn't make your list SJM.

Yup, I was ringside for that one in July. Six months later, I'm still struggling to make sense of it.
 
I didn't see: Andrew Cleary vs. Glen Ramsey from last weeks weekly steinway 9ball tournament. It was a thriller!
 
Yup, overlooked that one.

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What it looked like...
 
I think Shane's 3rd US Open win would be my top one.

There was also a good one to add on a list of top matches, the finals a few weeks ago between Hernandez and I think Shaw, I don't evern remember the tournament. I think Hernandez was down by quite a few games and had to make it hill hill to extend the race, which he did although ended up losing at the end.

The World Cup final was horrible to watch, winning on a miss with a fluke safety with 2 balls on the table, really??
 
Lot of support for Shane's effort in Virginia so far.

Another match I overlooked was Reyes 3 Orcullo 2 in the quarterfinal round of the Derby City one pocket event. Efren kicked the two in at double hill and ran out for the win.
 
SVB over Orcullo for his third US open. The jump shot off the stacked bridges, in the US open final, took huge balls under that much pressure and made the match for me.
 
I would say, Ronnie O Sullivan vs Mark Selby at the Crucible final. Great match there.

Smitty vs Gray, Mosconi Cup...

Plenty others, but these stand out to me...
 
Pool - Barton v Lou
Snooker - O'Sullivan v Trump in the UK Championship final.
 
Can you over a brief overview of the match and what made it so memorable for you?
The immense comeback Judd made but only to fall short at the final hurdle. I can't imagine making a comeback like that against a 50 break standard player, let alone Ronnie. And the grit and mental strength Ronnie showed to win the deciding frame.

Its not often I say this about a billiard match, but I was on the edge of my seat and couldn't look away for a second. I've had the pleasure to knock a few balls around with both players and it was an odd situation. I wanted Ronnie to win from the start but when Judd came back I wanted Judd to win purely for the fact this one single match could have made him into the next world beater. Then I didn't want any of them to lose in the final frame. Judd threw everything at Ronnie except the kitchen sink and just didn't have enough left in the mental tank to put in one last big break. Made a fairly simple mistake and Ronnie did what Ronnie does best, put the frame out of reach faster than you could ever believe.
 
The immense comeback Judd made but only to fall short at the final hurdle. I can't imagine making a comeback like that against a 50 break standard player, let alone Ronnie. And the grit and mental strength Ronnie showed to win the deciding frame.

Its not often I say this about a billiard match, but I was on the edge of my seat and couldn't look away for a second. I've had the pleasure to knock a few balls around with both players and it was an odd situation. I wanted Ronnie to win from the start but when Judd came back I wanted Judd to win purely for the fact this one single match could have made him into the next world beater. Then I didn't want any of them to lose in the final frame. Judd threw everything at Ronnie except the kitchen sink and just didn't have enough left in the mental tank to put in one last big break. Made a fairly simple mistake and Ronnie did what Ronnie does best, put the frame out of reach faster than you could ever believe.

Thanks for that. Sounds like it was something special.
 
SVB winning third straight US Open and coming back to do so, is it for me. Bergman beating Biado (also not on your list) would be second.

Shane's 3-peat was great, but for a single match... Bergman played World Class to beat Biado! That was THE match to watch!
 
I was ringside for the U.S. Open final between Shane and Dennis. It may have been the best played final match I've ever seen with both players shooting high .900's (I think it was something like .956 Shane and .945 Dennis).
 
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