I was nineteen years old and I was in a college pool hall and this guy just kept asking me to play him for something. I had only been playing seriously for a year at this time. I finally asked for the 5-ball playing 9-ball. I knew he was a good player and at the time I could only run about 4 or 5 balls. So I figured on any miss I could get out. He then asked for the break. I thought OK. $5 a rack until someone wins $100.
I am up $30 and he is not winning any games. He then asks if we can go to $10 a game and I said no problem. Now I am up $50. He now says how about I take the 7-ball and raise the stakes to $25 a game. I say no way; I like the spot where it is. At that moment the entire room of people started in on how I am taking advantage of people, hustling the angles, and they continued to pour out the peer pressure stuff until I caved in. It didn't take but one game for me to realize he is now playing defense for the first time and I'm in trouble. I only won one game until he finally won the hundred.
Some will say I just got out smarted me, but I didn't feel as though I had a choice in the matter. It was an ingenious hustle actually. Knowing I was new at the game, they set it up to make me feel like I was hustling them and I crumbled on feeling sorry for the guy. I ended making friends with those guys and they taught me a lot spots. It took a while, but I learned I could play and beat most people if I worked the weight (got the spot I needed) in the right way.
Moral here is that you don't have to be a good player to win money in pool, but you do have to be a smart gambler to get away with it.
Anyone else want to share something they saw or something that happened to them once?
I am up $30 and he is not winning any games. He then asks if we can go to $10 a game and I said no problem. Now I am up $50. He now says how about I take the 7-ball and raise the stakes to $25 a game. I say no way; I like the spot where it is. At that moment the entire room of people started in on how I am taking advantage of people, hustling the angles, and they continued to pour out the peer pressure stuff until I caved in. It didn't take but one game for me to realize he is now playing defense for the first time and I'm in trouble. I only won one game until he finally won the hundred.
Some will say I just got out smarted me, but I didn't feel as though I had a choice in the matter. It was an ingenious hustle actually. Knowing I was new at the game, they set it up to make me feel like I was hustling them and I crumbled on feeling sorry for the guy. I ended making friends with those guys and they taught me a lot spots. It took a while, but I learned I could play and beat most people if I worked the weight (got the spot I needed) in the right way.
Moral here is that you don't have to be a good player to win money in pool, but you do have to be a smart gambler to get away with it.
Anyone else want to share something they saw or something that happened to them once?