No better shot maker ever lived. He would make shots others wouldn't try.
I'll never forget a match between him and Mike Carella at Tournament Billiards in St. Louis. Played 2 shot roll out back then. Louie would roll to ridiculous spots, and then make the ball. (Although Carella put on a great show himself)
For an example (hope I can get the right words) he did an exhibition in my first pool hall. A couple of shots stand out in my memory.
First, he would line up 5 or 6 balls frozen on the foot rail. He'd take the cue ball in the kitchen creating 90 degree cuts on each of the balls and he'd fire them in the same pocket as if it were a speed pool shot. Yes, all of them in the same pocket. If he was cutting them into the right foot pocket, then the last ball, setting a couple inches outside the left foot pocket, frozen against the rail, would be fired into the right foot pocket.
The second shot was a draw shot. He'd put a ball in the right foot pocket. Set two other balls about a ball and a half width apart in front of the ball in the pocket and a foot or so out from the pocket. (In other words a tight fit for the cue ball to go between the two balls to pocket the ball in the pocket) He would shoot from the kitchen and fire the ball in and draw straight back and not hit either of the other two balls. But, that wasn't good enough. He would move the balls until the cue ball would barely fit between them (maybe a quarter inch more than a balls width of space between the balls) and do the same thing. Fire the ball in at 100 mph and draw straight back and not hit either ball.
Quite a showman also. Quite a personality. Didn't win as much as he should've. Wanted to play so bad he'd make bad games.
As far as Buddy was concerned, the story I've heard was, Buddy tortured him when they first played, but Louie kept comig back and it got to where Buddy didn't want to gamble with him.
My experience is limited but I can't imagine a better shot maker in the history of pool.
I'll never forget a match between him and Mike Carella at Tournament Billiards in St. Louis. Played 2 shot roll out back then. Louie would roll to ridiculous spots, and then make the ball. (Although Carella put on a great show himself)
For an example (hope I can get the right words) he did an exhibition in my first pool hall. A couple of shots stand out in my memory.
First, he would line up 5 or 6 balls frozen on the foot rail. He'd take the cue ball in the kitchen creating 90 degree cuts on each of the balls and he'd fire them in the same pocket as if it were a speed pool shot. Yes, all of them in the same pocket. If he was cutting them into the right foot pocket, then the last ball, setting a couple inches outside the left foot pocket, frozen against the rail, would be fired into the right foot pocket.
The second shot was a draw shot. He'd put a ball in the right foot pocket. Set two other balls about a ball and a half width apart in front of the ball in the pocket and a foot or so out from the pocket. (In other words a tight fit for the cue ball to go between the two balls to pocket the ball in the pocket) He would shoot from the kitchen and fire the ball in and draw straight back and not hit either of the other two balls. But, that wasn't good enough. He would move the balls until the cue ball would barely fit between them (maybe a quarter inch more than a balls width of space between the balls) and do the same thing. Fire the ball in at 100 mph and draw straight back and not hit either ball.
Quite a showman also. Quite a personality. Didn't win as much as he should've. Wanted to play so bad he'd make bad games.
As far as Buddy was concerned, the story I've heard was, Buddy tortured him when they first played, but Louie kept comig back and it got to where Buddy didn't want to gamble with him.
My experience is limited but I can't imagine a better shot maker in the history of pool.
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