GOAT or whatever, He made minced meat out of His opponents!This is not a GOAT thread.
And would do so today!
GOAT or whatever, He made minced meat out of His opponents!This is not a GOAT thread.
So what? This thread compares the value of great shot making to defensive wizardry.GOAT or whatever, He made minced meat out of His opponents!
And would do so today!
IMPO.So what? This thread compares the value of great shot making to defensive wizardry.
Following your tangent, there have been many pool GOAT threads on AZB over the years. Worst has never come out on top. In his day, those who watched him rated him as Lassiter's equal, which is very high praise indeed. Lassiter, however, was the better shot maker, and Nick Varner has suggested that Lassiter was the game's greatest ever shot maker. Worst is, perhaps best all around cueist if one includes 3-cushion billiards, but this is a pool thread.
Harold died some 60 years ago, but if you watched him in his prime, I'll give your opinion extra weight. He was certainly not the most dominant pool player in history, not even close.
Finally, nobody from that era played the game at anything close to the level of today's best. Back then, pockets were usually 4 3/4", but today's best run the table with greater ease despite playing on 4" pockets.
That's hilarious. Put them on 4 3/4" pockets and a Filler or Gorst might run 50 racks of 9ball in a row. In that era, Lassiter's 21-pack is the biggest run with which I'm familiar (Jay Helfert once posted that he thinks it was only 19).IMPO.
Overall conditions are far easier today!
The center of the pocket doesn't change!
Everyone is entitled to an opinion!That's hilarious. Put them on 4 3/4" pockets and a Filler or Gorst might run 50 racks of 9ball in a row. In that era, Lassiter's 21-pack is the biggest run with which I'm familiar (Jay Helfert once posted that he thinks it was only 19).
If you watch footage of the matches of the past, you'll see weaker fundamentals, weaker pattern play, and more missed shots. The game has come a long way.
Nonetheless, comparison across generations is near impossible. Was Sigel better than Filler? All we can say is that each put together a greater resume of major titles than any other player of his era.
Nice write.... did see him play at Janscos, and was there the last day, when Your money went in the Manila folder to the feds.I saw Crane play a number of times but only really had a conversation with him once. It was at the US Open on Chicago after he had just lost to Miz.
I was in the front row and after the match I was in the hotel restaurant. Crane came in and sat like one table from me. He was talking to who I assume was his wife. He was going on and on how his safe was perfect.
What happened was he safed Miz thinking Miz would play safe. Instead Miz took a very low percentage shot, made it and ran out. Crane went nuts. I thought he may break his cue putting it back in his case. Maybe that was why his wife didn't watch him play.
Next thing he is looking at me and says he saw it didn't he shoot the wrong shot? Of course I agreed with him and we got into a conversation for a while. He kind of complained about everything. The tables, lighting, the ref. I think he may have been easy to get annoyed.
I regularly got spotted 25 points until such time as he couldn't give it anymore.I see the ideal greatest players as those that possess two mindsets but with equal weight.
One that can devote equal skill and equal emphasis on either aspect of the game with the end goal of winning as the main driver . Smart enough to hide from the enemy until there is an opening for a kill shot!
You can go way back to even straight pool days and guys like Crane and Cicero Murphy were great 14.1 safety players but could get up and run 100 and out given the opening. If you ever played against a high run but also real good 14.1 safety player you know how they can torture you into a 125 to 15 loss very easily. That is how big spots were given in 14.1 gambling matches - like playing for 100 vs. 25 points.
Luther was a stone cold killer. If he was dancing, it was bcuz he didn't feel good that day.Luther's defense in 14.1 was Very good, he'd much rather take 3 scratches and loss of points and a rerack than ever give his peers a good shot.
Saw his play at Janscos and was impressed at his defense.
Best defense is a good offense.Yes, but well below the 14.1 defense of Irving Crane.
Ty!!!Shotmaking by far. That means you have good hand eye coordination and abilities. The rest comes easily after that.
You had a lot more players using substances back then as well. Some players I knew couldn't make a ball until half drunk. Hands shook too badly.That's hilarious. Put them on 4 3/4" pockets and a Filler or Gorst might run 50 racks of 9ball in a row. In that era, Lassiter's 21-pack is the biggest run with which I'm familiar (Jay Helfert once posted that he thinks it was only 19).
If you watch footage of the matches of the past, you'll see weaker fundamentals, weaker pattern play, and more missed shots. The game has come a long way.
Nonetheless, comparison across generations is near impossible. Was Sigel better than Filler? All we can say is that each put together a greater resume of major titles than any other player of his era.
My opinion is that this has already happened in WNT 9ball play. The tight pockets have made running out tougher, which has, unfortunately, led to more safety play, but the change in the break rule may have had an even bigger impact.The games have evolved, better players and better equipment. Seems like time for rules to evolve to balance offense and defense again. Offense has gotten too easy, therefore the tighter pockets but those have their own issues.
I have rethought this and disagree with my own statement here. Shot making is paramount to playing at a high level. I said that cue ball control, be it for position or safety play was most important and that is true. But without accuracy in shooting you can't produce that accurate position or safety play.Safety play and good position play go together. Both require good cue ball control. I think good shot making just seems to come. Good shot making generally just requires the confidence in your ability to take the shoot.
I think the way player seem to play now, at least from what I see in the television tournaments. Players are less inclined to take a tough shot. Safety play though it was always part of the game, now appears to become almost half of the game.
We used to play a game called "One shot Harrigan". I'm not going to go into explaining how the game was played but it was a gambling game. It was amazing what players could make when they had to shoot.
Reyes 120 Strickland 117Strickland in his prime beat anyone that shot better safes, they didn't get to shoot enough to play their game enough to win.
Knowing the guy you were playing could easily put together a 3 or 5 pack his next trip to the table made you approach the game with a slightly diff mindset back then. Winner broke, balls spotted, roll out. Spot shots and getting good shape after were crucial. I never see one of my favorites nowadays. The low inside 3 railer off the spot shot.My opinion is that this has already happened in WNT 9ball play. The tight pockets have made running out tougher, which has, unfortunately, led to more safety play, but the change in the break rule may have had an even bigger impact.
A decade ago, there was no break box, the 1ball was racked on the spot, and the pockets were 4 1/2". Not only was the wing ball dead but position could be played off the break. In WNT 9ball today, with the 9ball racked on the spot, a cut break is required to make a ball consistently on the break. The ability of the players to run packages has been greatly reduced as they can no longer play position off the break shot.
In WNT 9ball play, I think the changes are already in place and that the players have been slowed down on offense, but I think the pockets are a bit too tight.
In WNT 9ball play, the three pack has become quite a rare commodity.
Strongly disagree. Even at pro level, some play the patterns much better than others. Even at Fargo 780+, there are more than a few mediocre pattern players.Playing 9 ball though, a high level 9 ball player is almost always picking the right pattern (position route options) to have the best chance of running out.