what's the sene like nowadays in Tokyo?

Cool stuff Dave!
Yes, Don Don and Esquilio still come around, but I only see them at the occasional tournament. I'm not sure where they hang out but I just don't see them around as much as I used to.
You mean Hanawa Keisuke, right? He's plays real sporty and is one of the top pros on the Japan tour right now and Oi is pretty much the dominant player in the Kansai area. Not sure sure about Suzuki and Reyes though.
I would have loved to have been around back then and actually have a chance to beat some of these guys, cuz I sure can't do it now!

Keisuke is probably correct. Hard to tell, as back then, as always in Japan we called each other by the sir name with "san" "kun" or "puro". Hanawa was actually rookie of the year his first year as a pro but then kinda faded around '08 or so. Oi was the house pro at a small room called Flannel in the north Tokyo/Saitama area so I'm suprised to hear he's in the Kansai area. It's amazing how far some of these kids have come. I used to teach a 5th grade boy, and his best friend and Jr rival was Hijikata. I remember when these two kids were entering weeklies as C players. My student eventually got bogged down with high school entrance exams and quit, but Hijikata elected to skip high school and turned pro (JPBA) just as I was leaving Japan. I literally watched Oi and Hijikata go from kids that couldn't grip their cues properly, to becoming world class talent. Oi had a 3rd place finish at worlds a few years ago I believe.
I loved in Kawaguchi City right on the border of Saitama and Tokyo, and the area was surrounded by great places to play with many great players. I hung my hat at Freaks in Koshigaya, Eagle Koshigaya, Duck, Gibson, Green Room, Early Times Kasukabe, and a few other places in that area. Really miss the consistent tables, the great learning atmosphere, and the manners of Japanese players. I still have relatives in Japan, and my wife is Japanese so hopefully someday soon I can visit again.
 
Victor- what was the name of the place you took me to, please?

You shoul probably put up a link to it...:o

Hey BB, this is the place we went to:
Shibuya Cue: http://www.shibuyaest.co.jp/billiards
Not many players there, but location is good and it's cheap, with around 30 Gold Crowns to play on.

By the way, Monchi and I are playing in the Kanto Open this weekend. Lots of top players will be there and it's gonna be great! Wish us luck!
 
Keisuke is probably correct. Hard to tell, as back then, as always in Japan we called each other by the sir name with "san" "kun" or "puro". Hanawa was actually rookie of the year his first year as a pro but then kinda faded around '08 or so. Oi was the house pro at a small room called Flannel in the north Tokyo/Saitama area so I'm suprised to hear he's in the Kansai area. It's amazing how far some of these kids have come. I used to teach a 5th grade boy, and his best friend and Jr rival was Hijikata. I remember when these two kids were entering weeklies as C players. My student eventually got bogged down with high school entrance exams and quit, but Hijikata elected to skip high school and turned pro (JPBA) just as I was leaving Japan. I literally watched Oi and Hijikata go from kids that couldn't grip their cues properly, to becoming world class talent. Oi had a 3rd place finish at worlds a few years ago I believe.
I loved in Kawaguchi City right on the border of Saitama and Tokyo, and the area was surrounded by great places to play with many great players. I hung my hat at Freaks in Koshigaya, Eagle Koshigaya, Duck, Gibson, Green Room, Early Times Kasukabe, and a few other places in that area. Really miss the consistent tables, the great learning atmosphere, and the manners of Japanese players. I still have relatives in Japan, and my wife is Japanese so hopefully someday soon I can visit again.

Cool. Oi and Hijikata are definitely amazing talents.. I have a hard time imagining them as C players, though! I live on the eastern side of Tokyo near Chiba, so I don't go out to Saitama very often, but I know there are still lots of talented players playing out of that region.

I know what you mean about the atmosphere. Everytime I leave the country and go play somewhere else, I realize I take a lot for granted here, things like great playing conditions, super-polite players and staff, and the peace of mind to be able to leave my gear lying around without any fear of it being stolen.

Anyway, let me know if you're ever in town, I'd love to hear more stories of your pool adventures in Japan. Drinks are on me! ;)
 
Hey BB, this is the place we went to:
Shibuya Cue: http://www.shibuyaest.co.jp/billiards
Not many players there, but location is good and it's cheap, with around 30 Gold Crowns to play on.

By the way, Monchi and I are playing in the Kanto Open this weekend. Lots of top players will be there and it's gonna be great! Wish us luck!

Thanks, mon. I had a great time, I will remember it forever.

Give my best to chi. I am sure you two will play each other in the first round! At least there will be one winner!!
 
Too bad, we're in completely different brackets.
Actually it's a good thing, because I would have felt really bad about completely crushing him and knocking him out in the first round.

(I don't think he comes on AZ very often anymore, hopefully)
 
Does Takashi Toda still play, Victor?
I learned a sweet position shot from him in 1989.
 
Yup, he's still an active tournament pro and last I heard he was running a pool school out west as well.
That sounds pretty cool, can I ask what shot you learned from him?
 
Yup, he's still an active tournament pro and last I heard he was running a pool school out west as well.
That sounds pretty cool, can I ask what shot you learned from him?

I've never tried the cue table....will give it a whirl in the next couple days.
Probably the 1-pocket.org table....the other one made me sick.

will post in this thread
 
Toda told me, after taking the written part of his course, one of his students scored a 100-something in bowliards the first time he ever played.

He also said I need to work on making my game more intimidating after he watched KPY essentially run a 6 pack on me in the Japan Open. lol.
 
That's awesome! I suppose he was talking about that intimidating "in-the-chair stare".
 
Yup, he's still an active tournament pro and last I heard he was running a pool school out west as well.
That sounds pretty cool, can I ask what shot you learned from him?

Okay, Victor, here is the shot.
I used to play this position shot three rails...8-ball in the bottom left pocket....
....bit of low left english.
Some tables play better 8-ball in top left pocket with low right english.

[URL=http://www.billiardsthegame.com/onepocket/?pos=20|490,40|490,60|489.72416015625,80|490,100|490,120|490,140|490,260|262,232|19,200|490,220|490,240|490,260|490,280|490,300|490,355|279,340|490,360|490][/URL]

When Toda played this situation, he played the 8-ball in the lower left
pocket with low right english ( 5:00 oclock )...the cue-ball hits the top long rail
around the first diamond and curves back to the bottom long rail around
the middle diamond and then checks back to the the other long rail for
sweet position on the 9-ball.
What is really nice about this shot is that the better you hit it, the more
the cue-ball checks off the second rail, keeping it from two-railing into
the side pocket.

This makes it a better shot under pressure, 'cause you can let out shaft
instead of nursing it.

regards
pt
 
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Thanks pt. That definitely is a great shot and lot less touchy than the "natural" way to play it.
 
I showed a good one to victor too...let's see if he remembers it?

Hint: let your stroke out...
 

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Long, long, short for shape! I use it all the time.
Everytime I shoot it I feel like a pro, until I dog the next shot.
 
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I knew it was an option, but normally I wouldn't have played it that way unless I absolutely had to, so you definitely changed the way I shoot that shot!
I guess I never thanked you for it, so thank you! We need to get together again so you can show me more some stuff, like how you never seem to run out of pics for the funny pics and gifs thread.

By the way, Rocket Rodney is in town tonight for challenge matches, so I'm gonna take him on and show him a thing or two, like how to sit politely in a chair.
 
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