man I'm sure they had the accuracy but they didn't have to. I watch them play with big pockets and slow dead cloth and think how much easier the game would be not worrying about skid or balls rattling as easy BUT I can tell you I believe the current players would have to adjust also if they had to play on the old equipment. I know I struggle a bit on a bar box when I go from fast cloth that is on 90 percent of the tables where I can finesse the ball around the table with a little to spin to a slow malli cloth where now I have to muscle it around with a bigger stroke. I can only imagine trying to do that on a 9 or 10 foot table and how much harder you would have to hit the ball to go multiple rails for position
This ls honestly like trying to argue who's better Tiger woods or bobby jones. Bobby may not be able to hit it as but the equipment he used made the game a ton harder.. It's just an impossible argument.
Well said, common sense man. Only a moron would argue with this line of reasoning. John B.
Absolutely right. If the players of today had to play on the equipment from the 50's & 60's they would need to hit the balls much harder to move them around the table. The harder you hit a ball the less accuracy you have, generally speaking.
The larger 5 x 10's with slow cloth and clay balls would make modern players crazy until they adjusted to them, which they would. The ability to play great position on a 5 x 10 would kill the modern players, for a while at least.
If you brought players from the past into the present and onto modern tables they would also adjust to them. There's a reason that great players are/were great players; They master any tables and equipment they play on.
The past players who learned on slow tables ,without lively rails, learned how to "force" the cueball to a spot whereas the players of today mostly "roll" the cueball to a spot (comparatively speaking). Either group of players would soon become proficient though, no matter the tables, balls or cloth.
I could be wrong but I believe it's harder for a talented modern player to add speed on every shot than it would be for a talented player from the past to remove speed (on todays equipment). Adding speed hurts accuracy but they would adjust to it.
Guys like Harold Worst and Cornbread Red were known for having powerful strokes that intimidated players in their own eras, could you imagine a player like Shane trying to hit balls hard to move them around on a 5 x 10 with slow cloth & rails? He would adjust though, in time.
The same applies to 4 1/2 x 9's with slow cloth, rails and the old balls. Even newer balls don't move well on a slow table
P.S. There's nothing wrong with this thread's existence.
ONB