What's your fav. Poolhall ever?

I'd have to Vote for the Original Chris's Billiards in Chicago.

And Shooters in Minneapolis.

I haven't been to Hard Times yet though. What about down South & South East?


I've got to agree with this post about Shooters, I like that place a lot. Great people, Good tables, even better action if you want it. Only down side is they only have one 9' diamond. (I like GC better but it is nice to have the option) and they are 3.5 hours away from me.


best,

Justin
 
The Billiard Palace

before it was the hard times in belflower ca, it was upstairs and called the billiard palace, heart attact jack, tweedy, and on occasion ronnie, keith. i have seen some great games there !!!!!!!

Don' t forget about Cole, Popcorn, Buttermilk, Dickie, or Artesia Kenny. Yep, many great games happened there. Especially when all the greats showed up for tournaments in Burbank. It was like a circus after the tournament was through for the night in Burbank or even Long Beach.

The Billiard Palace was defiinitely the place to go after the local room closed for the night.

Gerry S.
 
Palace Billiards Downtown Missoula, MT...Now CLOSED! Second would be Baker's Billiards on Hollywood Way in Burbank, CA...Now CLOSED!
 
CR Billiards in Coon Rapids, MN
Airway Billiards in Dayton, OH
John Wesley's in Big Spring, TX
Cue and Cushion in St. Louis, MO
Carousel Cue Club in Garland, TX
Montana Billiards (Playmoor) in El Paso, TX

All of these places were great for various reasons...

I know Cue and Cushion is still going strong and I know Carousel Cue Club is gone but I'm not sure about the others...
 
I have to give a shout out to Shooters in Olathe, KS. Great room with great equipment. I've been able to watch some of the best players in the world over the years playing in tournaments or matching up.
 
North Shore Billiard Club


This one as described perfectly by George Fels of BD fame. Of course, this is only a snippet of his article, but you get the gist. And they had antique tables, 3C tables, Snooker table, and even Space Invaders !!! Many a nights this teenager slept under one of the tables.......

"That Club was Trump" by George Fels

"THE FACT THAT you had to climb a steep flight of stairs to get there was only the first thing to like about Chicago's North Shore Billiard Club. Pool without stairs is like a hot dog without mustard, and besides, the place was permanently insulated against the ennui of watching recreational players hack away. Every oscillating Richard in the room was good - very good - at something.

Which was, of course, exactly the room that part-owner Fred Bentivegna had in mind: the one place that legit road players would head for immediately when they hit town, just as they had to Bensinger's decades before. Virtually all the top black players in town were comfortable in that white room and neighborhood, a rarity in Chicago or anywhere else: the great John "Cannonball" Chapman even worked there, and Bugs Rucker and his personal Sancho Panza, the late Kenny "Romburg" Remus, were in the place incessantly. So was the personable high-roller called Watusi Slim, whose praying-mantis build allowed him to reach clear across a pool table flat-footed to snatch up a cube of chalk on the opposite rail while hardly bending.

So while Freddy may have envisioned himself center-stage in that high-powered pool arena, he was not even the best white player there. That mantel belonged to Artie Bodendorfer, whose demoralizing, suffocating-type one-pocket game was reminiscent of cuddling up to an anaconda. And with all that blood in the water, you just knew what would come next. Flyboy Spears, Cole Dickson, Jack Cooney, Bill Incardona, and others all made North Shore their first stop, just as Freddy had prophesied, and four-figure scores became the norm.

The ongoing pinochle games were not necessarily sociable either, and yet with all that high-stakes action, and the room's club status which entitled it to remain open all night, North Shore saw absolutely no hassles. That was partly because hasslers were subject to discussing their behavior with Freddy's lower-profile partners, Phil Guagliardo and Bobby Wilkinson; in the club's four or so years, no one ever chose that option nor even remotely considered it. Beyond that, North Sore policed itself extremely well, barring moochers or gamblers who would not pay their debts. The equipment was stellar and the club was always spotless; its logo, an ultra-classy pair of lions in top hats and formal dress, was commissioned and designed by peers of mine in the communications industry. It may have been conceived and built as a shrine to one-on-one gambling, but the North Shore Billiard club was one class act."
 
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That place was a dump the entire time it was open...which was only a few years. There hasn't been any kind of nice poolhall anywhere in Montana in the past 30 years. The owners of the Corner Pocket chain lived in Billings, and had a decent room there, until legalized gaming came along mid-80's, when it became Doc & Eddy's.

Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com

Palace Billiards Downtown Missoula, MT...Now CLOSED!
 
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Nice to see this legendary room recognized. I grew up just a few towns away from Hi Cue, but it was closed by the time I got active in the game.

The room I really miss is the late, lamented Chelsea Billiards in NYC. Comet Billiards in Parsippany, NJ was another fine room that is no longer around.

Although Chelsea and Comet both had a lot in common, I would put Chelsea slightly ahead because of its 8 snooker tables and 2 billiard tables and 24-hour service. Both had unprecedented space around each of its tables, were well-lit and incredibly friendly to serious pool.

Unlike Chelsea, Comet had a devoted owner who was active in the day-to-day operations. Bill donated his room to many tournaments for both amateurs and professionals throughout the years and was a proven friend of the game.
 
As a kid I remember my dad taking me to this place in Tennessee where there was a diner in the front and a black curtain with a hand written sign that said "Members Only". I think because pool halls had to be private clubs or something in this county. It had 3 tables I think and the smoke was thick and wooden benches were along the wall. I was really young and dont remember much about the pool. I just remember how smokey it was and how excited my dad was to be there. We used to have a fishing cabin in Paris TN so it was close to there but cannot remember where. Sorry to be so vague. I am sure someone might have better information than my 45 year old memory of this.

Would like to visit Fargo Billiards in the near future.
 
The Corner Pocket in Marlton, N.J. I fell in love with the game there. It had 20 Victor 4 1/2 x 9's, a 3 cushion table, and a snooker table. I would clean all the tables for free table time. Unfortunately, it only stayed open for 2 years. The Boulevard in Northeast Philly was another great place back in the mid seventies, action galore! Now my favorite room is at my home. I had a 20' x 26' addition built to accommodate my 4 1/2 x 9 Diamond Pro-Am.
 
Man so many rooms have closed. None of the places where I learned to play are open anymore and I'm only 28. My favorite of them was probably a place called The Silver Palace. It was really nice when it opened with new video games on one side and new 9ft Olhausens on the other. I was only about 12the or 13 when it was open so I didn't get to take much advantage of it before they had a fire. I also enjoyed the few times I went to the Q Club in Terrehaute. Very cool poolroom run by nice people. If it would have been closer to where I lived at the time I would have been there daily.
 
Jack and Jill's (owned by Bill "Weenie Beanie" Staton), Alexandria, Virginia.

Gentlmen's Cue, Reisterstown, Maryland.

Old school pool rooms.
 
California's best pool rooms

Cochrans and the Palace San Francisco

California Billards San Jose California

Terry Stonier's Jointed Cue, Sacramento Ca.
 
Past and Present

Past: Hi Cue in Elizabeth, NJ. Owned by Mike Ash. In the 1970's you could walk in and see Hopkins, Colavita, Mizerak, Margo, Martin on any given day!

Boulevard Billiards in Philly. Owned by Mike Fusco (No relation to Jimmy or Pete). Liked to wtch Jafar Basheer (AKA Henry or Patcheye) play one pocket.

Werners Billiards in Mohnton, PA. Small room in my homtown where I met and became friends with the legendary Jimmy Matz (RIP).

Present: Big Daddy's in Glenn Burnie, MD. Great owners with great equipment. They also have a 6x12 Snooker table to go along with the GC's and Diamond 9 footers.

Drexeline Billiards in Drexel Hill, PA. Owned By my friend Bob Maidhof. Great equipment. This is the room Jimmy Caras played in at the end of his carrer.

Wedge
 

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Circus Billiards, San Jose, CA (long gone) was my hangout for many years 60's-70's ...
My favorite the past 15+ years is The Jointed Cue in South Sacramento, CA ...
Authentic ... A "real" Pool Hall
 
for me it's a toss up between two rooms. milford rec in milford ct. and the now closed chelsea billiards in nyc. when i was in my teens they were the first two rooms my friends took me to. i was just a horrible banger (still am) and they all played. but in those rooms i saw more characters and more action than i can remember. it was really special and started my love of pool. i have heard that milford rec is still there but nothing like it was in the mid to late 80's when we hung out there. makes me sad.
my favorite today would have to mr. cues 2 here in atlanta. it's a close second to the rooms of my misspent youth.
 
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