Who was your biggest influence?

Bob Callahan

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
Pool doesn't exist in a vacuum--we have all been trained/encouraged by others. Sometimes it was just some old guy who hung out in in your first room, or maybe you were lucky and had a pro there. Could've been family member or friend.

Who were your greatest influences, and how did they influence you?
 
Hands down, Joe Tucker! He has helped me out sooooo much with his lessons and his instructional videos! I've learned A LOT!!!
 
My Dad taught me how to play pool at about 10 years old. He also taught me how to hustle and most of the moves that go with it. He also taught me the work ethic and that you will never get rich playing pool no matter how good you get. That's why I always had a job or a business. That was 62 years ago. Johnnyt
 
My Dad introduced me to the game when I was 13 years old & also gave me the best pool advise I have ever received...

'There's always a shot... you just have to find it.'
 
Early on it was a real good old timer in Jersey named Sam "One Poke" Fauver.He played in the era of Caras,Mosconi and Crane and was probably just a click under those guys. I learned a lot watching him and playing him.
Later on it was Neptune Joe Frady a very strong Jersey player. I learned a lot watching and playing him also.
Also an honorable mention gos out to Ernie Lager who taught me a lot in the '60s,a pretty good player himself.
 
The Game

Pool doesn't exist in a vacuum--we have all been trained/encouraged by others. Sometimes it was just some old guy who hung out in in your first room, or maybe you were lucky and had a pro there. Could've been family member or friend.

Who were your greatest influences, and how did they influence you?

The Game was my best Teacher ;)
 
Nick Nikolaidis (Yes....the trick shot guy). Back in the day was a pro player here in Montreal.

.Very smooth at the table
.Mentally tough
.Stoic
.Knowledgeable
.Focused

Taught me all about fundamentals & how to practice to improve.

That it's important to work on your skills/abilities to play all disciplines
 
George Mikula

Showed me what was possible on a pool table, many years ago at Chelsea Billiards in NYC. He wasn't always kind to those around him, but had a soft spot for me. Without his friendship I would have never stuck around long enough to fall in love with this game.
 
Louie Colquitt & Dickie Weaver

There were two, Louie Colquitt (not sure if the last name is spelled right... I used to watch him and Ike Runnels play banks and one pocket till all hours of the mornin'). He worked at Family Billiards in Chicago Heights IL... I learned a lot watching him.... AND my biggest influence was "Little" Dickie Weaver from Chicago Heights IL as well....Took a few years playin at his joint, Chicago Heights Billiards, but he eventually shared some very valuable knowledge with me that influenced my game tremendously...
 
tommy "buttermilk" brown. he taught me more by expecting the most out of me without lessons or advice. the "look" would let me know if i was moving in the right direction; old school all the way.
 
Edwin Penn Santucci......"Tooch".........my stepdad..........he grew up hustling pool back in the late 1920's & early 30's in NYC back when the US Straight Pool Championship Title (14.1) had real meaning & significance (Race to 2500 points). Eddie was hustling pool before he reached his teens and the older players that knew how well he could play would back him in a race just to see his opponents whine after they lost to just a young kid. Then during WWII, he made side money hustling other soldiers on the bases but he always sent home his winnings to his family. He kept playing pool until the late 50's and just unexpectedly quit. He picked the game up again in 1962 when he started teaching me how to play pool..........Yup, he's my #1 mentor and the primary reason I gained such a passionate interest in pool.
 
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Jack Hoffman

Pool doesn't exist in a vacuum--we have all been trained/encouraged by others. Sometimes it was just some old guy who hung out in in your first room, or maybe you were lucky and had a pro there. Could've been family member or friend.

Who were your greatest influences, and how did they influence you?

Probably Jack Hoffman, the first really strong player I saw play in the 1950s. In 1963 I played him in a 3-cushion tournament. I ran 6, and he beat me 25-10!

That was at Sheldon's Cigar Store and Pool Room, in La Crosse, WI...
 
Pool doesn't exist in a vacuum--we have all been trained/encouraged by others. Sometimes it was just some old guy who hung out in in your first room, or maybe you were lucky and had a pro there. Could've been family member or friend.

Who were your greatest influences, and how did they influence you?

R.H Gilmore. He lived in Oklahoma in the 80's before moving to Mississippi and while he never gave me pool lessons per se he taught me how to balance my pool life with my family life. That allowed me to play about as much as I have wanted over the years. He was a hell of a man. I miss him and regret never getting down to see him in Mississippi. :/

I have learned a lot from multiple sources since then. I would say the biggest source of information which I received came from reading Byrne. That information has been repackaged many times but his message still rings true for me in most cases.

Nice thread!

Ken
 
In college (early 10970s), my fraternity house had a 9 ft. pool table. I was a hack, but loved playing and used it as a daily study break in the evenings. One guy in the house was a fairly good player, but his older brother Rick Daher who visited occasionally was great. IMO, he remains as one of the best non-professional players I have ever seen play. One Saturday morning, Rick was visiting, but his brother was busy leaving Rick with not much to do. Beginning at about 8:00 AM, Rick started to teach me the only pool lesson I have ever taken. He spent an entire 8 hour day showing me the basics of pool. In essence, he covered just about everything in the books that were later to publish, Banking with the Beard and The 99 Critical Shots in Pool. I absorbed everything he said that day. The skills he taught took me from being a decent shot maker to adding position play in my game. By the next year, I reached the semifinals in the university straight pool tournament. I was hooked from then on. I am still a hack, but the skills I developed that day served as the foundation for 40+ years of playing.

Since pool has been a major pastime for me, I always wanted to thank Rick for the day he spent with me and tell him how much enjoyment I have experienced as a result. I lost track of his younger brother and repeated attempts to find Rick came up dry. Just over a year ago, I tried again and managed to find his phone number. After a few attempts, I reached him and let him know at the outset that this was going to be an unusual call. He gave up pool just after that time and focused on a new business venture that became his livelihood and from which he eventually retired. A phone call out of the blue was clearly not on his initial daily agenda. But he appreciated the thanks for something he did 40 years earlier.

Nice thread. Thanks for starting it.

Greg
 
For me it was an old, and dear friend, from Alabama, Clyde C. Anderson.
Clyde, who played semi-pro pool under the name "The Alabama Crimson Clyde", instilled in me the virtues of a game well played, and a fondness for women and alcohol.
It was from Clyde that I learned the "Dixie Carom", a shot made by hitting the cue ball off the table, caroming off the head of a drunk passed out in a nearby chair, and back on to the table where it ducks behind the ball sitting in front my opponents pocket. One of the best safeties known to man.
He also showed me how he used to give enemas to elephants, while working for a traveling circus. That knowledge led to a brief, but exciting, career in show business. :smile:
 
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