Hail Mary Shot said:Why Ain't there no pics of pretty women ?![]()
Yeah, put that girl from Guam on here. I'd watch her practice for an hour or two or three.
Hail Mary Shot said:Why Ain't there no pics of pretty women ?![]()
Hail Mary Shot said:Why Ain't there no pics of pretty women ?![]()
jay helfert said:Based on the first day's results, I no longer like my side of it. Unfortunately I'm committed to this bet, so I will just have to suffer. I expected Dennis to come out of the gate fast and establish an early lead. Nothing doing. If it is nip and tuck all the way, the five game spot will definitely come into play.
Now, it actually looks like Yang can win this match. He may be more comfortable after hanging within one game on the first day. At this point, I would bet on him, with odds of course. That's how I handicap the first day's results. Dennis better wake up and fast.
X Breaker said:I read a lot of rerack requests, does that mean the ref is not racking the balls tight, or perhaps not lined up along the center line of the table?
cuycuy said:Check out Poolphilippines.com for the story.
Sorry Gopi - I fear you've been misled by a poster here, at no point did I ever promise blow-by-blow coverage. No press room at the venue. The person uploading results to cues.com.tw is probably your best bet for on demand scores, he's there at the venue uploading the results from his chair at the stands. I'm lugging around a camera.
Sorry for the late upload. Had some technical difficulties.
X Breaker said:I do not expect this match to be so close after the second day. With regard to the comment that Yang played sloppy, I believe Yang is just warming up, and trying to adjust to the equipment and the atomsphere--he just got there, in another country, playing in a mall, with a crowd totally on the other guy's side, speaking in a foreign language. Even the ref is a local. He is down by only one game so it really is a tied match here.
Yang is capable of putting together many break and runs and so does Dennis, I expect to see each player trying real hard to pull a big lead on the second day, with lots of run outs. So, the break is really important. Whoever gets the break dailed in first would be at a great advantage.
I read a lot of rerack requests, does that mean the ref is not racking the balls tight, or perhaps not lined up along the center line of the table?
Whoever gets a big lead going into the third day will put a lot of heat on the other guy, and will most likely wins. I think whoever could see the finish line first would play even better, and the result should not be as close as they are now.
Just my 2 cents.
Richard
cuycuy said:![]()
Ces Marquez is the ref. She's a WPC vet. Apparently they didn't get to pre-mark the area of the triangle (S.O.P. at the WPC - which most of the Filipino refs have adapted), before the match, and had to do it mid-match with a ballpen. If you don't, you get a lot of complaints from players that the balls aren't tight enough - which is what happened there.
Everything went fine after they marked the area.
Thank you for the pictures, and the detailed and well written report on your web site. From the pictures, I see that Orcullo is no longer breaking with his Samsara cue.
1. How many people are travelling with Yang, is it only Robert Huang?
2. Are they using the YTT cloth, or Simonse cloth on the tables?
cuycuy said:I asked an organizer, he said YTT. I asked the Star Billiards worker on-site (who did the set-up) and he said Simonis 860. I tried looking for the label (I can't tell it by touch), but people around the stands generally agreed it was a Simonis.
X Breaker said:Thank you for the pictures, and the detailed and well written report on your web site. From the pictures, I see that Orcullo is no longer breaking with his Samsara cue.
Richard
mariopatricio said:Having witnessed everything that happened on Day One, I believe that the verdict of some posters that the play of Dennis and Young was "sloppy all the way" is dead wrong.
Sure Yang missed some shots and Dennis scratched a few times and muffed a couple of kicks. And the racks were not breaking well for them.
But otherwise these two guys were awesome. Their shotmaking, position play and defense were superb. I thought I saw vividly in Day One why Dennis and Yang can take any other player today in a money game. And why most are afraid to face them.
Perhaps what misled those reporting the match to posters is the wretched commentary on the Solar Sports coverage. The analyst and the anchor don't know enough about the game and can't distinguish between tough and easy, great and routine. They reduce analysis to counting errors.
IMO, this match is living up to its billing as a great challenge match. And I have seen thousand of matches in my time. But of course, I could be wrong.
BlowFish said:I revisited the recording and Dennis was using a Pred BK2.
You can actually see it from Cuycuy's site.
cuycuy said:Check out Poolphilippines.com for the story.
Sorry Gopi - I fear you've been misled by a poster here, at no point did I ever promise blow-by-blow coverage. No press room at the venue. The person uploading results to cues.com.tw is probably your best bet for on demand scores, he's there at the venue uploading the results from his chair at the stands. I'm lugging around a camera.
Sorry for the late upload. Had some technical difficulties.
X Breaker said:Thank you, I saw that he has chosen a Predator over a Samsara.
Can you watch this in Hong Kong?
I wonder if they sell the DVD later?
From what I saw on Cuycuy's site, this looks more like a tournament/exhibition than a money match.
I think it would be more interesting if they would let them play as if they were really gambling, with money posted on the light, side betting going on the side in front of everyone, backers/manager sitting on the sideline sweating the matches...etc.
May be it can take place in a pool hall, dark and seedy, with lots of smokes...
I dont know, for the first time two of the best money players to match up over $10,000, this looks kind of like a regular tournament. Also, $10,000 is not their money, so it is more of a ego and pride match up, then a match whereas the player may choke because of how much money is at stake. I am sure $10,000 is not like something they have never gambled for. To see who is the best money player, should they be playing in a money match setting, rather than a tournament setting?
Now, if they have to each come up with $100,000 themselves, post it and gamble in front of everyone and have it filmed as a reality show, that would be more exciting in my opinon.
Richard
X Breaker said:About $20,000 US side bet was estimated to have been placed before the match was commenced. Both Yang and Orcullo had about the same number of bets.