April 2007 - Inside Pool Magazine
Transcription
April 2007 - Inside Pool Magazine
0407_Cover 3/7/07 2:56 PM Page 1 0407_Cover 3/6/07 4:10 PM Page 2 54-April-2007 3/6/07 2:55 AM Page 1 54-April-2007 3/6/07 2:57 AM Page 2 54-April-2007 3/6/07 3:03 AM Page 3 54-April-2007 3/6/07 2:00 PM Page 4 April 2007 CONTENTS INSTRUCTION 14 Grady’s Grad School Get ‘Em in Play 16 This Is Your Captain Speaking On the Cover The 24-year-old GaYoung Kim of Seoul, Korea, bested Xiaoting Pan in the finals of the Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic in Rocky Mount, NC, to win the tour’s season opener for 2007. The Ten Most Common Problems, Part Six 18 Pro Pool Workout Focus on the Task 20 Beat People With a Stick Blacking Out 22 Technologically Speaking Complementary Caroms FEATURES 24 “Dynamic Duo” Dominates Breedlove and Lee Take Easy Skins Billiards Victory 28 Simple Strategy Pays Off for Archer Victory at Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship 32 Rec Room Requisites InsidePOOL picks the best of the best for your home gameroom 38 Luck and Skill Are Both Good to Have Ga-Young Kim Employs Both in WPBA Season Opener 28 4 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 54-April-2007 3/6/07 3:13 AM Page 5 54-April-2007 3/6/07 2:08 PM Page 6 Volume VII, Issue 4 COLUMNS 24 42 What’s in the Case Darren Appleton 44 Cue Maker’s Corner Dennis Dieckman - Cue Builder 48 On Board With the BCA Change is Gonna Come 50 Industry News 32 DEPARTMENTS 8 12 54 24 56 62 66 70 72 76 80 Publisher Advertising Sales Director JR Calvert Bill Perry publisher@insidepoolmag.com sales@insidepoolmag.com Editor Sally P. Timko editor@insidepoolmag.com Graphic Artist Thomas W. Hartman art@insidepoolmag.com Editorial Assistant Rick Davis rdavis@insidepoolmag.com Technical Consultant Tom Simpson Instructional Staff Johnny Archer, Steve Crutchfield, Max Eberle, Allison Fisher, Bob Henning, John W. Loftus, Grady Mathews, Keith McCready, Tom Simpson Feature Photo Credits JR Calvert Contributing Writers Fred Agnir, Jose Burgos, Tony Butera, Rick Davis, Marc Dionne, Willy Hermoza, Kay Higgins E-mail info@insidepoolmag.com Toll Free 866-961-7665 Website www.insidepoolmag.com Administrative Offices 220 S. Jefferson Street, Kittanning, PA 16201 6 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Pool on TV Advertiser Directory League Player of the Month Regional Roundup Northeast Southeast Central Western World Regional Player of the Month Photo Caption Contest InsidePOOL Magazine Volume VII, Issue 4 (ISSN 1547-3511) is published monthly except June and August by Spheragon Publishing, 220 S. Jefferson Street, Kittanning, PA 16201. Single copy price: $3.95 in U.S.A., $5.95 in Canada. Subscription prices: $19.99/yr in the U.S.A., $28/yr in Canada, $39/yr International. Periodicals postage at Kittanning, PA, and additional mailing offices. Submissions of manuscripts, illustrations, and/or photographs must be accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. Reproduction of this magazine in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to: InsidePOOL Magazine, P.O. Box 972, Kittanning, PA 16201. PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 3:30 AM Page 7 54-April-2007 3/6/07 3:35 AM Page 8 Pool on TV (continued on page 10) All times are Eastern Time Zone – check local listings for changes. ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN Classic 1995 Challenge of Champions Semifinal #1 1-Apr 11:00 AM ESPNC 2004 Tournament of Champions Semifinal #2 6-Apr 3:00 PM ESPNC 2004 Tournament of Champions Semifinal #1 1995 Challenge of Champions Semifinal #2 5-Apr 7-Apr 3:00 PM 11:00 AM ESPNC ESPNC 1995 Challenge of Champions Finals 8-Apr 11:00 AM ESPNC 2007 WPBA Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic Semifinal #2 8-Apr 4:00 PM ESPN2 2007 WPBA Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic Semifinal #1 2007 WPBA Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic Finals 8-Apr 8-Apr 3:00 PM 5:00 PM ESPN2 ESPN2 2004 Tournament of Champions Finals 9-Apr 3:00 PM ESPNC 2005 Sudden Death 7-Ball Championship Finals 12-Apr 3:00 PM ESPNC 2007 Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship Semifinal #2 12-Apr 8:00 PM ESPN2 2005 Sudden Death 7-Ball Championship Semifinal #1 2007 Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship Semifinal #1 2007 Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship Finals 1996 International Challenge of Champions Semifinal #1 2007 Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship Semifinal #1 2007 Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship Semifinal #2 2007 Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship Finals 1995 International Challenge of Champions Semifinal #2 2001 Trick Shot Magic 8 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 10-Apr 12-Apr 12-Apr 14-Apr 14-Apr 14-Apr 14-Apri 15-Apr 15-Apr 3:00 PM 7:00 PM ESPNC ESPN2 9:00 PM ESPN2 12:00 PM ESPN 11:00 AM 1:00 PM ESPNC ESPN 2:00 PM ESPN 3:00 PM ESPNC 11:00 AM ESPNC 54-April-2007 3/6/07 3:38 AM Page 9 54-April-2007 3/6/07 3:49 AM Page 10 Pool on TV All times are Eastern Time Zone – check local listings for changes. ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN Classic 2002 Trick Shot Magic 15-Apr 4:00 PM ESPNC 2004 Trick Shot Magic Finals 15-Apr 6:00 PM ESPNC 2003 Trick Shot Magic 2005 Trick Shot Magic Finals 2005 Trick Shot Magic Semifinal #2 2005 Trick Shot Magic Finals 2005 Trick Shot Challenge Semifinal #1 2005 Trick Shot Challenge Semifinal #2 2006 EnjoyPool.com Women’s 9-Ball Championship Semifinals 15-Apr 15-Apr 16-Apr 17-Apr 18-Apr 19-Apr 19-Apr 2006 EnjoyPool.com Women’s 9-Ball Championship Finals 20-Apr 2007 WPBA Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic Semifinal #2 21-Apr 2007 WPBA Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic Semifinal #1 2007 WPBA Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic Finals 21-Apr 21-Apr 5:00 PM 7:00 PM 3:00 PM 3:00 PM 3:00 PM 3:00 PM 3:00 PM 2:00 PM 1:00 PM 2:00 PM 3:00 PM ESPNC ESPNC ESPNC ESPNC ESPNC ESPNC ESPN2 ESPN2 ESPN2 ESPN2 ESPN2 2005 Trick Shot Challenge Finals 23-Apr 3:00 PM ESPNC 2005 World Summit of Pool Semifinal #2 26-Apr 3:00 PM ESPNC 1997 Challenge of Champions Semifinal #2 28-Apr 11:00 AM ESPNC 2005 World Summit of Pool Quarterfinals 2005 World Summit of Pool Finals 1997 Challenge of Champions Finals 10 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 24-Apr 27-Apr 29-Apr 3:00 PM 3:00 PM 11:00 AM ESPNC ESPNC ESPNC 54-April-2007 3/6/07 3:53 AM Page 11 54-April-2007 3/6/07 2:13 PM Page 12 T ADVERTISER DIRECTORY To contact any of our advertisers, visit their website, send an e-mail, or give them a call. Opening March 1st, 2007 So you want to whip up a new twisted mixture of fun and entertainment. First you’ll need some ingredients. Might I suggest the following: Take a dash of fine dining, add a touch of live entertainment and fun, sprinkle your mixture with a banquet facility, knead the entire mix together with a world class billiards club, and top it all off with a swirl of mansion with water way views. What you come up with is the newest thing to hit something old in the greater Seattle / Tacoma area. WINFIELDS TWISTED CUE CLUB. 539 Broadway Tacoma, Washington 98402, With both club sponsored pool tournaments, and nightly pool leagues including APA, TAP and BCA, the club aims to fulfill your every billiard need. 12 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Allen Hopkins Productions . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71 www.milliondollar9ball.com American Poolplayers Association . . . . . . .55 www.poolplayers.com Atlas Billiard Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 www.cuestik.com Bebob Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78 www.bebobpublishing.com Billiard Aim Trainer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 www.BilliardAimTrainer.com Billiards Express . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 www.billiardsexpress.com Billiard Warehouse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 www.BilliardWarehouse.com Billiards 911.com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 www.billiards911.com Blue Book, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68 www.bluebookinc.com CFR Productions LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 www.cfrproductions.com Chadam Innovations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 www.AcCueShot.com Champion Shuffleboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 www.championshuffleboard.com College of Pool & Billiards . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48 www.cue-u.com Creative Inventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65 www.porper.com Cue & Case Sales, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53 800-835-7665 Cue Doctor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56 www.cuedoctor.com CueStix International . . . . . . . 27, Back Cover www.scorpioncues.com Diamond Billiard Products, Inc. . . . . . . . . .49 www.diamondbilliardproducts.com DIAMONDBACK Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47 www.KillerStroke.com DLT Billiards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 www.DLTbilliards.com DMI Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36-37 www.DMIsports.com Florida Pro Tour . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75 954-966-6300 Frank’s Center, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60 www.frankscenterinc.com Grady Mathews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76 www.gradymathews.com InsidePOOL Magazine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70 www.insidepoolmag.com International Billiard & Home Recreation Expo . . . .IBC www.bca-pool.com International Pool Tour . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 www.internationalpooltour.com Iwan Simonis, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .IFC www.SimonisCloth.com Jacoby Custom Cues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68 www.jacobycue.com John “Mr. 400” Schmidt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70 www.seyberts.com John W. 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W Amaze Amaze Your Your Friends! Friends! Terrify Your Your Terrify Opponents! Opponents! E N The r e ’s a Page 13 RRSP RRSP As n See V ! T On $29.95 NEW! Comes Comes w with Full NEW! ith Full Instructions and and D DVD! VD! Instructions Perform amazing Masse Masse shots, shots, erform amazing P Incredible Curves Curves and and Swerves Swerves w with ith Incredible Ease – Just like the Pros! Ease – Just like the Pros! 3 sizes: sizes: P Pool, Snooker, English English P Pool 3 ool ool, Snooker, Visit our website www.twistertip.com for location of your local dealer or email us at sales@twistertip.com 54-April-2007 INSTRUCTION 3/6/07 T 11:22 AM Page 14 GRADY’S GRAD SCHOOL BY GRADY MATHEWS Get ‘Em in Play This month’s column shows three situations in which I need all the balls. Of course, when I am behind, I would like to keep all the balls in play. That way, if I win the first shot, I’ll probably be out. Conversely, my opponent would like to keep one ball out of play. In Diagram 1, I could just bank the 11 ball and, if I made it, play safe on the 1 ball. A much better shot is to hit the 11 ball rail-first off the 1 ball, making the 1 ball in the side pocket and sending the 11 ball toward my pocket. A little bit of draw works well here. The cue ball ends up at Point X. If the cue ball were at Point X to begin with, I would play the same shot, but I wouldn’t go rail-first with the 11 ball. I would just make the 11 ball go off the 1 ball toward my pocket. I might win the game in Diagram 2 with this shot. The 11 ball is a perfect 3 inches off the rail (2 inches is not enough room for the “tickey,” and 4 inches is a bit too far off the rail.). A tickey is a shot where the cue ball or an object ball goes one rail, contacts another object ball, and then continues on to hopefully achieve the desired result. It is very important here to strike the rail with the 3 ball before contacting 14 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Diagram 1 Diagram 2 Diagram 3 the 11 ball. This causes both balls to go toward my pocket, and as shown in the diagram, we’ll draw the cue ball straight back to pocket the 7 ball. If the 3 ball hits the 11 ball first, there is a kiss on the 3 and 11 balls. In Diagram 3, the optimum distance for the 10 ball to be off the rail in this situation is 3 to 5 inches. A level cue and one tip of left english works best here. As the cue ball and 10 ball lie, it’s hard to hit too deep behind the 10 ball, which is why the 3- to 5inch range is important. The goal on this shot is to one-rail kick the 10 ball toward our pocket and, at the same time, pocket the 15 ball. If I, instead of my opponent, only needed one ball, I’d play the same shot, but I would be careful to not pocket the 15 ball. I trust the end-game ploys will help your game. Of course, when you are ahead, you want to “Smith Barney” your opponent. That is to say, make him earn it, every ball, preferably one at a time.t Grady “The Professor” Mathews is one of pool’s most recognized figures. His success at the table has opened doors for him as technical advisor to movie producers, commentator on Accu-Stats video productions, producer of lliard instructional video tapes, and as an author. Grady has won several onepocket world titles. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 3:58 AM Page 15 54-April-2007 I INSTRUCTION 3/6/07 4:00 AM Page 16 THIS IS YOUR CAPTAIN SPEAKING BY JOHN W. LOFTUS The Ten Most Common Problems, Part Six In the game of 8-ball, unlike in 9-ball, players must select the order in which they should shoot their respective group of balls. I’ve already commented on the differences between these two popular pool games. But one major difference is that 8-ball players must make these types of decisions, whereas 9-ball players don’t have to do so. I see this as another common problem among pool shooters who play 8-ball: poor ball selection. Better players take the right set of balls to begin with (see last month’s column), but they also make better choices on the table with the balls they have. At the ama- balls on the table first: the ”ducks.” Then, when they make all of these shots, they’ll be left with nothing … nothing to make, and nothing to use to break out other balls. They begin without a plan, and without a plan, they plan to fail. Remember, balls that block the pocket do just that … they block the pocket! Leave them there until you can run out or until you need them to break out another one of your balls. The time to deal with problem balls is early in the game, not later. If this cannot be done at the beginning of the game, then don’t waste your easier balls by sinking them immediately. Save them for later when they can be used to your advantage. teur level of play, this can mean a huge difference if someone makes better choices on the table itself. It will literally win you more games if you make better choices. Since even average pool shooters can run a few balls and get fairly good position, a crucial difference between better shooters lies in their ability to pocket the proper balls in the proper order. Some really good 9-ball players I know can be beaten more often in 8-ball precisely because they are not used to making these types of choices. Poor pool shooters will step up to the table and proceed to make all of the easiest Many other shooters save combinations for last or break up balls without an “insurance ball” to get shape on after doing so. Unless it’s necessary, players who attempt these shots are flirting with disaster. Whenever you try a combination shot or try to break out balls, try getting shape on a separate ball unrelated to the shot itself. One way to learn how to have good ball selection is to watch good shooters run racks, since there are so many different table layouts once the balls are broken. At the risk of claiming I’m something I’m not, let me show you how I ran a rack recently. I remember it 16 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 because it was the deciding game for me during a match. After my opponent broke, I was left with the diagrammed table layout. Solids are the obvious choice because they were in more in the open, while stripes had several troubled balls. But I was facing a combination to start it off. Since it was on a bar box, the combination wasn’t all that difficult. Still, I had to make it if I wanted to win, and I had to play shape for the 3 ball in the corner just in case the 7 ball didn’t travel as planned. I made it and got shape on both of those two balls (the only shot diagrammed). After making that shot, I proceeded with my plan. Seeing ahead, I needed to get shape on the 1 ball. With that in mind, I made the 3 ball and the 7 ball with an eye on the shape I needed for that 1 ball. I made them and got straight on the 1 ball. Using a little draw off of the 1 ball, I got good shape on the 5 ball in the side pocket. When making the 5, I bounced whitey off the long rail between the 11 and the 13 balls and got straight in on the 4 ball (which I didn’t want to be straight in on, but that happens). I made the 4 ball and placed the cue ball within a couple of inches from that same corner pocket (Whew!). Using that angle with a slight draw, I brought the cue ball back toward the center of the table (I hit it a little hard) for a shot on the money ball and made it without scratching in the opposite corner pocket off the 12 ball (Whew again!). If you see ahead and make a plan, many times it can be done.t “Captain” John Loftus, of Angola, Indiana, has been the captain of a number of first-place pool teams and is presently a skill level 7 in the APA 8-ball and a skill level 9 in the APA 9-ball leagues. He has played on as many as seven different pool teams a session. John is the author of How to be the Captain of a Winning APA 8-Ball Team, and he is the captain for a Master’s Division APA team. Contact him at johnwloftus@verizon.net. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:00 AM Page 17 54-April-2007 INSTRUCTION 3/6/07 L 4:04 AM Page 18 PRO POOL WORKOUT BY BOB HENNING Focus on the Task Last month we saw how having Clear Goals is essential to getting into a Dead Stroke state. When you have a clear and committed target, it’s easier to focus and give yourself to the flow of the performance. This month let’s look at another essential ingredient that must be present to get into The Zone. Number four on the list of nine components may be the most important of all. It is Focusing on the Task at Hand. There are many things happening all around you when it is your inning at the table. People are talking, laughing, smoking. Trucks are driving by outside. The sun is shining into the poolroom through the front windows. The table light is reflected on the surface of every suffers, too. It loses its focus and its edge. You make an easy shot, but the cue ball rolls too far. You feel your confidence slipping. On the next shot an unwanted image slips into your mind, and your body produces the unwanted outcome before you can redirect it. My God, what’s happening here? Well, you’re definitely not in The Zone! You’re not focused on the task at hand in the present moment, and a Dead Stroke state can only happen in the present moment. It cannot happen in the past or the future. You must keep your attention on the task at hand. You must focus on the task that needs to be done. Maintaining the present-moment focus that is necessary to stay in stroke requires Maintaining the present-moment focus that is necessary to stay in stroke requires discipline and discretion. ball, and each ball is throwing a shadow onto the cloth. Food smells are in the air, and a guy is playing video poker at the end of the counter. Surrounded by all of this, your unconscious mind is doing its best to filter out thousands of different bits of information—each of which which, if empowered, distract you from your shot. On top of it all, your conscious mind is bombarded by unexpected thoughts that arise and sometimes steal your attention away before you can stop them. You have imaginary conversations with your friends about the outcome of the match while you’re still in it. As your mind wanders, your body 18 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 discipline and discretion. You need to be able to recognize what is essential to the job at hand and what is not. You must learn to recognize irrelevant thoughts and immediately return your focus to the task at hand. The quicker you see those thoughts taking your attention—and let them go—the more readily you’ll stay in stroke. Nick Varner once said that when his match was called he told himself it was “time to go to work.” This is a great attitude to take to the table. When you come with the intention to “do the job in front of you,” you are preparing yourself to see and manage the distractions which are sure to come. You are preparing yourself to focus and maintain concentration on what you need to do—to focus your mental energies on the task at hand. Pool requires a high level of concentration, but it needs to be effortless, too. When you are concentrating “really hard,” your mind is already compromised. It is full of the judging, evaluating, and planning activity that normally occupies the everyday mind. This is a distraction, too. At this point, some of your awareness is relegated to the role of an observer, and you must take control of your thought processes to return fully to the present. When you are distracted, you can refocus in two simple steps. First, you must be able to recognize that your focus has slipped. For instance, if your attention has strayed to your competitor, you must be able to see that that has happened. Hear the whine of sirens and the clang of bells! See the red flashing lights of warning. WRONG! WRONG! WRONG! REFOCUS! REFOCUS! The second step is to choose anew. Consciously decide to focus on what is relevant RIGHT NOW. Take charge and direct yourself. Pay attention to what is happening at the moment! Wow! There you go again, player. You’re in Dead Stroke! Good luck & good shootin’!t Bob Henning is the author of The Pro Book, widely considered to be the most advanced training resource for competitive pool players. It brings the latest techniques of the top coaches and trainers of all sports into pool. It is intended for those who wish to prepare physically, mentally, and psychologically for pool competition. Bob is also the author of “The Pro Book Video Series,” a complete, on-the-table training system, and he recently released The Advanced Pro Book. In addition, he has authored Cornbread Red, a biography of the colorful Billy “Cornbread Red” Burge. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:06 AM Page 19 54-April-2007 I INSTRUCTION 3/6/07 4:09 AM Page 20 BEAT PEOPLE WITH A STICK BY TOM SIMPSON Blacking Out It’s absolutely vital to be in the present moment during each shot. For a shot to be the beautiful, fluid, hitch-free, confident, effortless motion you’d like it to be, you can be occupied with nothing else. If you’re down on a shot but you’re still thinking about the great shot you just made, you are not in the present moment—you’re focused on the past at the cost of losing your awareness of what’s happening in the present. With your attention stuck in the past or the future, you tend to miss by simply not focusing enough attention on what you’re doing. Your attention is divided. Obviously, to perform at your best, you should be giving your undivided attention to each and every shot. The real trick is to catch yourself when you’re not present—before you shoot. When you’ve just made a great shot, or if the pressure of a situation is distracting you, don’t rush up When our attention goes to what we look like or how our movements function, we’re no longer focused on the practical pool challenge of the moment. How about when you’re down on a shot but the little player in your head is already celebrating that this rack is done or this match is over? This ever happen to you? Didja miss? Or worse, that nagging, whiny voice in your head is focusing you on uncertainty and doubt, robbing you of the confidence you need to shoot fearlessly in the moment. Yeah, never happens to me either. In all of these situations, you’re not living in the present moment—you’re living in the past or the future. It’s not real, and it’s not what’s happening right now, in front of you, at the table. I believe a significant factor in why we love the challenge of pool is simply that good pool requires our full attention. We love to be fully engaged with difficult but rewarding activity. Pool challenges us physically, psychologically, and intellectually. And on top of that, it’s a performance art. We often do it in public, with a critical audience, under pressure. To play well, there just isn’t room for anything but the present moment. If we’re busy whipping ourselves or congratulating ourselves over some shot (the past), or if we’re busy imagining a win or worrying about a possible miss (the future), guess what? We’re not right here, right now, fully engaged in the shot. 20 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 and shoot the next shot! Take a lap or two of the table, wash your hands, touch up your tip, stretch, whatever. Do something to pass a little time and get past whatever it is, so you can focus on the present shot. Go down on the shot when you feel ready and clear. Another type of distraction also plagues pool players. It’s a biggie. I call it “Blacking Out,” and I think the cause is self-consciousness. We are distracted by our awareness of the fact that we are performing, by the pressure of the game or match, by the fact that we are being watched, or by who is watching. We can be caught up in mechanical issues of form and stroke and be distracted from the task of the moment—delivering an appropriate, properly aimed stroke. When our attention goes to what we look like or how our movements function, we’re no longer focused on the practical pool challenge of the moment. We may be doing something worthwhile, but it’s not what we need to be doing during play. This is performance. To perform with beauty and excellence, we need to be present and alive in the moment by moment unfolding of the action. Self-conscious players sometimes black out during the hit swing. They lose presence and go black during the hit. They may not be seeing. They may not hear. They have no clear body memory of the hit stroke. After going to great lengths to line up the shot and get ready to deliver a precise stroke, their awareness is elsewhere during the critical moment of execution. Where was your attention during the hit? Where were your eyes? What were you seeing? Did you see the cue ball hit the object ball? Shoot some shots. Immediately after each shot, reflect on what happened during the hit. What are you seeing? Are you blacking out for an instant? Are you there for the whole shot? Try to stay focused and really witness the cue ball/object ball collision. To do this, you have to be present. Consciously intending to stay present through the whole swing is the first step. It also helps to have a “go/nogo” point for your pre-shot routine, a point where you consciously decide whether the shot is a go or it needs adjustment. If the shot’s a go, and you’re a go, then go. Try to stay with the shot from decision to completion. If it needs more than a micro-adjustment, come up and re-focus, get present, and go down again. In occasional practice sessions, shoot some racks of balls, keeping track of the percentage of shots where you were fully present in the shot. With awareness of your tendencies and a little vigilance, you can improve. It’s hard to win when you’re not present, but it’s easy to lose. Playing pool, we revel in the joy and misery of unfolding strategies, rolls, shots, games, matches, and money. Let’s do it fully, taking our best shot, every shot. Present moment, only moment. Present shot, only shot.t Tom Simpson is a BCA Master Instructor. A full-time instructor with a BCA Accredited National Billiard Academy in Columbus, Ohio, he has worked with thousands of players. As founder of Elephant Balls, Ltd., inventor of Practice Balls®, developer of the Ghostball Aim Trainer®, and Secret Aiming Systems™ Coach, Tom’s innovations in training have helped players dramatically improve their skills and deepen their knowledge. Read 35 instructional articles at the academy website: www.PoolClinics.com. Contact: Tom@PoolClinics.com, 614-975-8337. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:11 AM Page 21 www.InsidePOOLmag.com 21 54-April-2007 INSTRUCTION 3/6/07 I 11:27 AM Page 22 TECHNICALLY SPEAKING BY STEVE CRUTCHFIELD Complementary Caroms In the game of 9-ball, it’s wise to always keep an eye on the 9 when it’s close to a pocket. Experienced players know many ways to end a game early with a combination, a carom, or a combination that caroms into the 9 and sends it into a pocket. The most common short-game win is a simple combination shot as shown in Diagram 1. In this example, the 5 ball is shot into the 9 ball for the win. Diagram 2 shows a situation where the 5 ball is blocked by the 8 ball, preventing a 5-9 combination shot. In this case, a carom shot gives the win by shooting the cue ball into the 5 ball in such a way that the cue ball deflects onto a path towards the 9. Diagram 3 shows a creative variation where the 5-9 combination is blocked by the 8 ball but the nearby 6 ball provides a carom path for the 5 ball. Although combination shots can be difficult to execute, there is nothing puzzling about them. You simply shoot one object ball into another object ball as if the first object ball was the cue ball. Carom shots are not only difficult, they are also a bit perplexing because of the post-collision path of a rolling cue ball. When a cue ball strikes an object ball, the object ball follows a straight line through the diameter of the point of contact. The cue ball, however, travels along an arc that is determined by the initial cue ball speed and the percent of contact with the object ball. Diagram 4 shows the paths of both balls for a halfball hit. As a result of this, you can’t use the tangent line to judge a carom shot unless you happen to be positioned for a stun shot. In most cases, the carom is shot with a rolling cue ball. Therefore, a successful carom shooter is required to know the “effective” cue ball angle as a function of the percent of contact with an object ball. Table A shows this relationship. 22 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Diagram 1 Diagram 2 Diagram 3 54-April-2007 3/6/07 12:13 PM Page 23 Now to the point of my title, “Complementary Caroms.” A close look at the unique angles in Table A shows that for every cue ball angle resulting from a fat hit, there is a thin hit that produces the same cue ball angle. For example, a 24degree cue ball angle can be created with either a thin hit of 19% contact or a fat hit of 80% contact. If a smaller cue ball angle is required, then a contact of either 11% or 85% results in a cue ball angle of 19 degrees. Many times, the location of adjacent balls will require either a thin hit carom or a fat hit carom. It’s also interesting to note that the maximum angle of a rolling cue ball is 33 degrees from its initial line of travel. This maximum angle occurs at 45% object ball contact (33 degree object ball angle) and at 60% object ball contact (24 degree object ball angle). The next time you attempt a carom shot with a rolling cue ball, remember that you have two options for the shot. Use this table for your shot selection until you develop a “feel” for the deflection of a rolling cue ball that results from these complementary carom shots.t Diagram 4 % Contact 1% 11% 19% 40% 45% 60% 65% 80% 85% 96% Cue Ball Angle 60 190 240 320 330 330 320 240 190 60 Having worked in a poolroom his last two years of high school, Steve was already an accomplished player before entering Purdue University’s Indianapolis campus, where he won the campus 14.1 championship his freshman year. He won again his sophomore and junior years after transferring to Miami University of Ohio where he spent the next five years earning his B.S. and M.S. in physics. Mr. Crutchfield has taught college physics as an adjunct professor. Returning to the game that he loves in 1998, Steve joined the APA 9-ball league, where he is a skill level 8 and was MVP in his district in 2001. www.InsidePOOLmag.com 23 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:17 AM Page 24 “Dynamic Duo” Dominates Breedlove and Lee Take Easy Skins Billiards Victory by Sally P. Timko 24 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 ” 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:19 AM Page 25 By anyone’s standards, the Skins Billiards Championship event was a blowout. The husband-and-wife team of George Breedlove and Jeanette Lee could’ve been playing against anyone and it wouldn’t have made a difference. The fact that they were up against Johnny Archer and Jennifer Barretta mattered not one whit to them. “We actually played pretty good,” affirmed Breedlove after the match. “We only missed one or two shots—and they were tough shots, ones that there was no safe, you had to go for it. I thought we did pretty good. I definitely didn’t think that it was going to be that lopsided.” In fact, the event was so lopsided that the Breedlove/Lee team walked away with the entire prize purse of $40,000. Together they were an unstoppable force at the February 10 event, held in conjunction with the Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship, which took place directly after the Skins match. Allen Hopkins and Billiards International, Ltd., teamed up again to make the Skins Billiards Championship happen, and their sponsors included Olhausen Billiards Manufacturing Inc., Aramith, RST2 International, Original Italian Slate, Viking Cues, Ozone Billiards, Silver Cup Chalk Inc., and Iwan Simonis. The host location, the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, MA, was packed with enthusiastic pool fans from all over the Northeast. The event changed its format this year to scotch doubles, but otherwise it was similar. It was a 12-game match with 4 skins possible. To win a skin, a team had to notch three games in a row. Money from games not won was carried over from skin to skin, and there was a sudden-death playoff for any remaining skins after the last rack. The teams alternated the breaks, and team members alternated shots. It was possible, of course, that neither team would win three games in a row throughout the match and that it would come down to a $40,000 onegame tiebreaker. But that didn’t happen. Breedlove broke first and came up empty: Archer and Barretta cleared the table. Archer broke and made the 9 ball, which made two games in a row for them. And that … was that. So powerful was the Breedlove/Lee team, they did not allow their opponents more than one rack after those first two. They collected the first skin, worth $7,000, after winning the fifth rack when Barretta scratched. They immediately racked up the next skin for $10,000 by scoring the following three games after another foul by Barretta. A safety battle came up in the ninth rack that saw Lee leave Breedlove a tough shot on the 5 ball. Without missing a beat, Breedlove lined up the B Comedian Frank Del Pizzo was the tournament director for both the Skins Billiards and the Texas Hold 'Em Championships, and his professional demeanor was appreciated by all. Sporting a new ‘do, Johnny Archer studies the table carefully before making his shot selection. s ory ko New mom Jennifer Barretta sizes up the situation on the table. www.InsidePOOLmag.com 25 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:22 AM Page 26 Archer scratches his head over a difficult leave while discussing what to do next with his teammate. A smile graces the lips of “The Black Widow” as she prepares to shot her next shot. George Breedlove grins as he sees where his teammate left him. bank and made it smoothly. “Oh, is that how it’s done?” Lee asked with a smile and touched hands with her husband—a ritual they performed throughout the match. A missed jump shot on the 2 ball by Barretta gave the next rack to Breedlove and Lee, and then the husband-and-wife team broke and ran the next game to win $16,000. “That’s a lot of money for one ball!” exclaimed Lee. There was only $6,000 left to be divvied up at this point, and when Archer scratched, giving the Breedlove/Lee team that game, it looked as though there might be no contest. But a missed 1 ball by Breedlove—his first and only miss of the event—meant that the next rack went to Archer and Barretta, bringing on the one-game tiebreaker. Archer and Breedlove lagged for the final break, and the latter won, which meant that Lee broke. Thing were going well for the team until Lee hooked Breedlove for the 4 ball. “I love you!” she cried apologetically. But again, Breedlove seamlessly kick-banked in the 4 without thinking twice about it, causing great excitement within the crowd. Left with few options, Lee played safe on the 5, which Archer kicked in to more screams from the audience. But Barretta wobbled the 6 ball, and Breedlove and Lee cleared the rest of the balls from the table, earning the entire $40,000 for their outstanding performance. Barretta, who was accompanied by her husband, Rick, and their newborn baby, Max, gave her point of view: “The pressure of Johnny Archer—like I have to perform, you know what I mean? That makes it tough. And the thing is, I didn’t really have shots. Everything was a kick, a jump. Which I should come with, but you don’t always, especially when you lose the momentum. It was just a rough set, and missing that last ball, which I totally should have made—that was just the icing on the cake.” “We really didn’t practice,” said Breedlove regarding the team’s incredible rapport. “I have been hitting balls—I mean, not a lot, but an hour here and there— but with the format, there seems like there’s so much less pressure when you’re alternating shots. You know how people say that there’s more pressure in individual sports? That’s for sure. There’s no doubt. There will be a lot more pressure here in the next one coming up.”t 26 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 To view an extensive online photo gallery of the Skins Billiards Championship, please visit www.InsidePOOLmag.com. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:24 AM Page 27 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:26 AM Page 28 Simple Strategy Pays Off for Archer Victory at Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship by Sally P. Timko J Johnny Archer might not have been dealt a great hand from the start, but his luck on the river brought him through to the winner’s circle with style. “I’ve played better before, but I’ve played worse before. I know I got the rolls—it wasn’t that I outplayed everybody. I played decent, but John [Schmidt] played good. I ran out when I got the chance.” Thus spoke Archer, that master of modesty, right after winning the Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship February 10. He entered the finals as a wild card, having been eliminated in the semifinal round by Corey Deuel, and though he had the smallest amount of chips to start with, he ultimately proved that he has the biggest heart. This was the second Texas Hold ‘Em event, which is put on by Billiards International, Ltd., and Allen Hopkins. Hosted by the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, MA, it was held in conjunction with the Skins Billiards Championship, which was directly beforehand. Sponsors included Olhausen Billiard Manufacturing Inc., Aramith, RST2 International, Original Italian Slate, Viking Cues, Iwan Simonis, and Silver Cup Chalk. Only eight players were invited to participate and put up the hefty $5,000 entry fee: Archer, Schmidt, Corey Deuel, George Breedlove, Jeanette Lee, Jennifer Barretta, Rodney Morris, and Luc Salvas. Everyone received $125,000 in chips to start out with in the semifinal matches, which featured four players, with only the top two chipleaders from each advancing to the finals. Every match consisted of 12-16 racks, with 4 games to a round. With every round, the ante amount required from each player went up until gradually players had to go “all in” because they did not have the amount required. If they won that round, they stayed alive, but if not, they were eliminated. 28 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Luck and Talent Prevail The arena at the Basketball Hall of Fame was crowded with eager spectators, and ESPN was on hand to tape the event, which will be aired in April. Fresh off his triumph in the Skins Billiards event, George Breedlove started off the first semifinal match, but it was Barretta who took the first real advantage when Morris missed a bank in the third rack—any miss resulted in ball in hand for the incoming player. She cleared that rack and then notched the first break and run-out, winning two in a row. The alternating-break format, though, made sure that if a player was to get a strong foothold in the chip totals, it would be a combination of luck and talent that did so. Morris might have been strong in the latter department, but the element of luck was not with him in Springfield. Other than winning the second rack, he never got to shoot at a ball again, putting him out in the thirteenth game. But Breedlove’s freewheeling style suited the aggressive format to a T, and though at the end of the twelfth rack things were fairly even for him, Schmidt, and Barretta, he won the following game, which had a huge pot of 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:28 AM Page 29 $180,000 in chips. This ousted Morris, who was all in, and put Barretta in the same predicament in the next round. Schmidt came up empty on his last break, and next up was Barretta; unfortunately for her, she missed an easy 1 ball, and Breedlove dished up, advancing with Schmidt to the finals. Archer and the speedy Salvas dominated the first four games of the second semifinal match, but Lee got her opening when the Canadian missed the 2 ball in the fifth rack. “On the board—yeah!” she exclaimed after clearing the table. Her supreme confidence lasted throughout the match, which seemed to be filled with empty breaks, scratches, and misses. Midway through, Deuel took a commanding lead by winning three racks in a row, taking his chip total to $235,000, over $100,000 higher than the next in line. When Salvas badly missed the 8 ball in the twelfth rack, Lee cleaned up and put Salvas on the defensive in the next game, forcing him all in. He never got the chance to shoot, as Archer scratched on the break and Deuel cleared the table. Now Deuel’s total was a whopping $340,000, with Lee at $120,000 and Archer all in at $40,000. “Rocket” Rodney Morris didn’t get too many chances at the table and was all in by the thirteenth rack. Poke and Hope! Triumph escaped Jeanette Lee in this event, though she played well yet again. George Breedlove made it to the finals with the most chips but was the first to go. Flummoxed when Deuel came up empty on his next break, Lee studied the table and announced, “The Black Widow’s famous ‘Poke and Hope’ shot,” but despite hope, nothing dropped. Archer turned the tables by running out the rack and staying alive, but he was all in again after Lee won the next game. He broke in the following game but ended up giving ball in hand to Deuel because he didn’t have a shot after the break. A couple of balls later, though, Deuel hooked himself behind the 9 ball for the 6 and fouled, leaving a 6-9 combo. It didn’t go for Lee, who was up next, but Archer pocketed it, keeping his head above water yet again. Deuel broke and ran the following rack, which had a pot worth $90,000 per player, putting him far in the lead with $390,000. “So all I gotta do is break and run out and everything will be okay?” Lee asked as she approached the table next, knowing she was in danger. “I did it last time—I can do it again.” After a tremendous jump shot on the 1 ball, she ended up out of line on the 7 and missed, giving the table to Archer, who sank the remaining balls. Because Archer only had $30,000 in chips, he only collected that much from Lee and Deuel. But because he had more chips than Lee when Deuel won the last rack to take the entire $500,000 worth of chips, Archer was pushed forward to the finals as a wild card with $100,000 in chips. “I told John … it don’t take but for us to stay in there, win a couple of games, catch up with the third guy, and then kind of stymie the last guy,” Archer explained his strategy of going into the finals with the smallest amount of chips. “Then us slow guys can come up.” It was a simple strategy, but it worked like a charm. With Archer the low man on the totem pole and Schmidt with only $165,000 in chips against Breedlove’s $335,000 and Deuel’s $500,000, it seemed a daunting task to take on at first. Especially www.InsidePOOLmag.com 29 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:30 AM Page 30 since Archer started off by missing the 2 ball in the first rack, passing the game to Schmidt. The current U.S. Open champ emerged to dominate, slowly building his chip count up to $500,000 by the twelfth rack. Archer and Deuel were still in good shape, but Breedlove came up empty on two breaks and scratched on another one. Without winning a single game or even really getting to shoot, he was all in by the eleventh rack and out after the next, which Schmidt broke and ran. Deuel was the next to say farewell, as his chip count was down to $80,000 and the rules, beginning with the thirteenth game, stated that the pot value would be equal to the sum of the short stack amount from each player. Even though Deuel broke in that rack, he missed getting position on the 4 ball and ended up giving ball in hand to the incoming Archer, which sealed his fate. With only Archer and Schmidt left, one had to be all in at all times. Archer, after ousting Deuel, had $940,000 in chips, while Schmidt had $160,000. But in an incredible two-game swing, it was then Schmidt who was playing for the win. He had his fate in his own hands but got out of line on the 9 ball, left himself on the rail, and missed. With ball in hand on the 9 ball, Archer was able to win that game easily but lost the next when he missed a 2-9 combo. All in with $360,000 in chips, Schmidt approached the table for his final break and scratched—Archer calmly picked through the rack and cleared the table to win the $25,000 grand prize. Jennifer Barretta had one of the toughest outs throughout the entire event, and she came through with flying colors. Speedy Canadian Luc Salvas eagerly watches the balls to see how they will end up. 30 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Teammates with Schmidt and Archer at last year’s Mosconi Cup, Corey Deuel had his event ended by giving Archer ball in hand. Reigning U.S. Open champion John Schmidt went in with a small stack of chips and came out with second place. Not too shabby! Schmidt, who collected $12,000 for second place, was philosophical about the missed 9 ball. “Well, I was on the rail— really the shot that I hit bad was the eight. I hit the eight with not enough left, and I almost scratched, and that left my cue ball on the rail on the nine. And of course in the tournament you don’t want a tough shot. It wasn’t really as easy as it looked. I mean, of course I’d like to shoot it again, but I’m gonna miss that sometimes, and that’s probably the easiest nine ball I’ve missed in an important spot in eight years. I don’t miss a lot of nine balls, so I’m bummed about that, but what are you gonna do?” “This could actually be my day, because it’s the way the tournament goes,” said Archer afterward regarding the unusual format. “Things can turn around really quickly. All you can do is just try to run out when you can.” Simple but effective.t To view an extensive online photo gallery of the Texas Hold ‘Em Billiards Championship, please visit www.InsidePOOLmag.com. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:34 AM Page 31 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:35 AM Page 32 Rec Room Requisites 01 Prestige Series Rec Room Requisites Complete your rec room by showcasing these rare and beautiful cues from McDermott’s topof-the-line Prestige Series, made from handselected premium woods including birdseye maple, East Indian rosewood, African ebony, and Mexican bacote. Intricate patterned inlays adorn the forearms and sleeves with materials like genuine blue sapphire, lizard-embossed black leather, South American purpleheart, mother of pearl, 24-karat gold medallions, and embossed rings. McDermott Prestige Cues are numbered limited editions of 100. Visit www.mcdermottcue.com or call 800-666-2283 for ordering information. 03 “The Hustler” Shadowbox Mueller Recreational Products offers movie memorabilia for the billiard lover! Add to your favorite room and relive the classic billiard movie moments you enjoy from “The Hustler.” This framed piece combines original movie photographs from Hollywood, real pool cues, and real pool balls that are diamond cut for the cleanest edge. These items are cut and mounted on acid-free matting that will not discolor from heat, sunlight, or humidity. A laser-engraved plate names the movie and the actors. To order, log onto www.poolndarts.com, or call Mueller’s at 800-627-8888. 32 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 02 Vintage Charleston The Vintage Charleston is a reproduction by Champion Shuffleboard of an original design from the 1940s. Handcrafted in maple, its art deco styling includes classic period elements like inlaid mirror detailing along the cradle, stainless steel runners down the legs, and luxurious red vinyl liners. And then, of course, there’s the Champion playfield, made from the finest Canadian maple and finished with Champion’s Lifetime Polymer surface. To order, call 800-826-7856, or visit www.championshuffleboard.com. 04 Game Room Tables and Accessories Create the perfect game room for a lifetime of fun in your home with Game Room Collection Pool Tables and Accessories from Olhausen Billiard Manufacturing, Inc®. You’ll be delighted with the craftsmanship and attention to detail that goes into every Olhausen® gameroom furniture piece. Call 800-866-4606 for an authorized dealer near you, or go online to www.olhausenbilliards.com. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 2:18 PM Page 33 Helping to keep the historical English game of darts alive, RAM Gameroom Products introduces their Bullseye Dart Board Cabinet. This wood cabinet holds most standard dartboards and adds a stylish accent to any gameroom area. For more information, please call 888-876-2931, or visit their website at www.ramgameroom.com (dealers only, please). 07 Spectator Chairs Sit on it! These sturdy spectator chairs are perfect for home use or casual commercial settings. Offered in four different styles at great prices, these chairs are available exclusively from CueStix International. Call 800-645-9803, or visit www.cuestix.com for ordering information. Dealers only, please. 06 Tip Pik Ask for the Classic Tip Pik at your favorite retailer or online source. It encompasses solid construction of brass and stainless steel using over 40 needle sharp pins for tip perforation and chalk retention. The Tip Pik is the only tool in the industry that offers an unconditional lifetime warranty. Buy yours online at www.BilliardsExpress.com, or dealers please contact Scott Long at 800-540-1761, extension 204. Rec Room Requisites 05 Bullseye Dart Board Cabinet 08 Deluxe Eight-Cue Wall Rack This deluxe eight cue wall rack from Rockwell Billiards comes in four finishes and is crafted from high-quality American red oak, birch, or maple wood. It includes storage for eight cues, cone chalk, and balls. It also comes equipped with a four-person score counter. This pool cue rack is easy to assemble, and the suggested retail price is $199.95 but is on sale for $169.95. To order, contact Rockwell Billiards at 877-231-1426, or log onto www.rockwellbilliards.com. www.InsidePOOLmag.com 33 54-April-2007 3/6/07 2:26 PM Page 34 09 Goal-Flex™ Hockey Table Rec Room Requisites This next-generation table from DMI Sports is the first truly “high tech” hockey table. Goal-Flex uses motion-detecting LED light bars to set goal movement and size. Also, the console unit contains a computer capable of running more than 180 game variations, so now players can program goals to change in size or move during play. Goal-Flex technology is also available on DMI’s American Legend line of soccer tables. For ordering information, contact DMI Sports at 800-423-3220, or visit their website at www.dmisports.com. 11 Deluxe Spectator Chair 10 Poker Pool Games Poker Pool integrates a variety of new games, including Stud Poker, Blackjack, Rummy, and more. The 15 Poker Pool balls have been imprinted with 4 faces onto the ball by using VIGMA’s patented, high-resolution HTD technology, providing card-game styles of pool games. Poker Pool Games is presented in a case that can also be used as a scoring case and is easy to carry. To order, log onto www.vigma.com. The graceful styling and clean architecture help make the Santa Fe table by DLT Billiards a true standout. Constructed of select maple wood, its streamlined cabinet and sturdy legs combine simplicity and beauty. The extra-wide profile rails come standard with genuine mother of pearl/abalone doublediamond sights. Featuring a two-tone finish in black/natural, the Santa Fe matches virtually any decor. The one-inch slate comes in three pieces. The suggested retail price for the Santa Fe is $4,295. For ordering information, please contact DLT International at 888-782-2208, or visit their website at www.dltbilliards.com. This deluxe spectator chair in a natural oak finish is the perfect place to relax while watching your opponent miss a critical shot. Coasters in the arms hold your beverage of choice, and notches in the arms make safe places to lean your cues. The curved seat and backrest, plus the footrest, make this chair exceedingly comfortable. Available through CueSight.com, this chair regularly retails for $200 but is now on sale for only $160. To order, please call 877-CUESIGHT. 34 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 12 Santa Fe 54-April-2007 3/6/07 2:31 PM Page 35 Snooker Snot Cue Conditioner is possibly the best silicone based shaft conditioner on the market. Simply apply 3-5 drops of Snooker Snot to the shaft of your cue and instantly remove the oil and debris that keeps you from getting the stroke that you want. Snooker Snot leaves you with a non-greasy, cue-smith smooth shaft. One bottle offers approximately 150 applications. Best of all, with customer satisfaction in mind, Snooker Snot offers a full money-back guarantee if their product does not meet your expectations. Visit them today at Snookersnot.com. If you always wanted your home bar room complete with the look and feel of the bars that charge you for every draft, be sure to include the Merit Megatouch Gametime. Merit’s Gametime is the home version of the ubiquitous touch-screen games we’ve all played at the bar. It sits comfortably on any home bar, counter, or table. The Gametime comes with over 100 games, including classics like Photo Hunt, Tri-Towers, and Trivia Whiz, but also adds new hits like Monkey Bash, Sudoku, and Texas Hold ‘Em. For home use, Merit has added educational content from BrainQuest. Learn more at www.megatouchgametime.com. 15 Billiard Aim Trainer™ The BAT™ is the world’s first pool trainer that teaches the “three-cut system” of billiards, as opposed to the “ghost ball” system taught by other aiming tools. This product uses a combination of references to show the player the exact cue ball path for targeting, the degree of the angle, the contact point, and exactly how much of the object ball needs to be cut. The product is fully endorsed by Allison Fisher . The BAT™ comes with a hard-shell carrying case, key chain, and a 40-page instructional booklet. To order, call 877-356-2110, or visit www.BilliardAimTrainer.com. 16 Rec Room Requisites 14 13 Snooker Snot Merit Megatouch Gametime Carsten The A.E. Schmidt Carsten is a pool table like no other. The innovative pool table doubles as a dining room table and is modern and elegant with clean lines and a simple design. It is a regulation 7-foot pool table, measuring 53” by 94”, and is different than other dining pool tables on the market because people can pull their chairs up to the table comfortably as they would with a normal dining table. Call 800-325-9676 or visit www.aeschmidtbilliards.com to learn how A.E. Schmidt can create the perfect table for your home. 17 The Tiger Paw® Cue Holder Machined from high-quality, aircraft-grade billet aluminum, the Tiger Paw® Cue Holder is flexible enough to accommodate all gameroom tables, regardless of shape. The Tiger Paw® Cue Holder is anchored by a heavy-duty and highly polished brass center. The bottom is lined with vinyl pads to keep it securely in place, and the arms are lined with topquality leather to protect your cues from marks and scratches. All you need to do is set the Tiger Paw® on your table top and open the arms. To get yours today, call 800-5-TIGER-5, or visit their website at www.tigerproducts.com. www.InsidePOOLmag.com 35 Rec Room Requisites 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:43 AM 18 Diamond Pro-Am Page 36 Diamond Billiard Products is pleased to introduce the new Diamond Pro-Am for the finest billiard halls and homes around the world. Featuring Dymondwood rails, this table is burn and dent resistant and also has a unique “no-lift” leveling system. The table also has a bi-level pocket design, a quiet and fast ball return, and a one-piece, 1-inch-thick premiumgrade slate. To order, call Diamond Billiard Products, Inc. at 812-288-7665, or visit www.diamondbilliardproducts.com. 19 Eight Ball Cue Rack A new and unique product from Trader Ridge, this cue rack complements any décor and can be placed anywhere for use during play or used for display and storage. The Eight Ball Cue Rack accepts up to nine cues and holds them individually, ready to use via its unique pocket design. Molded as one piece, these racks are tough, durable, and look great in any setting. The suggested retail price is $89.95, plus shipping and handling. For ordering information, contact Trader Ridge LLC at 507-359-3291, or visit them online at www.traderridge.com. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:47 AM Page 37 Enhance your table and your enjoyment with Simonis cloth, the truest-playing cloth made. Woven with a centuries-old tradition of quality, Simonis cloth’s flat, flawless service provides unmatched ball control for maximum accuracy and consistent play. Simonis cloth helps both professionals and casual players play their best—and that means more playing enjoyment. For more information, call 800-SIMONIS or visit www.simoniscloth.com. 21 The Twister Perform amazing massé shots and incredible swerves with ease with this essential new cue accessory for amateurs and pros alike. The TWISTER™ is a new product that slips over the tip of the cue stick and, with a little practice, enables pool players of all abilities to play some of the most amazing shots in pool today—the massé and the swerve. It can also be used for all sorts of other shots—top spin, back spin, and more. The TWISTER™ is available from CueStix and Cue & Case through authorized dealers. For further information, visit www.twistertip.com. Rec Room Requisites 20 Simonis Cloth 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:50 AM Page 38 Luck and Skill Are Both Good to Have Ga-Young Kim Employs Both in WPBA Season Opener by Sally P. Timko Most professionals will freely admit that luck can come in handy at times. Since she turned pro in 2004, Ga-Young Kim has mainly relied on her firepower and tremendous shot-making ability to win her the matches, and she firmly states in her official biography that it’s better to be good than lucky. But at the Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic in Rocky Mount, NC, where she was facing Xiaoting Pan in the finals, Kim was in a quandary. Hill-hill and hooked for the 4 ball, a little bit o’ luck was just what she required to get her where she needed to be. The Carolina Classic was the first event of the season for the Women’s Professional Billiard Association (WPBA). Hosted by the Gateway Convention Center in Rocky Mount, NC, the tournament saw a number of significant upsets throughout that may instigate a changing of the guard. Ones to Watch A couple of surprising early exits, for example, included Jennifer Chen and Jennifer Barretta going two and out. Chen lost 9-6 to Vivian Villareal and then a hill-hill nail-biter to Belinda Calhoun, while 16th-ranked Barretta went out to Darlene Stinson 9-5 and Joanne Ashton 9-6. Morgan Steinman, InsidePOOL Magazine’s Amateur Player of the Year for 2006, came out the winner of a hill-hill match against number-three-ranked Kelly Fisher Thursday in a somewhat controversial match that saw Fisher’s last 8 ball ejected from the pocket thanks to a projecting screw, according to the Brit. Steinman went on through the field to make it to the final 16—she had played the always-tough Tiffany Nelson and lost 95, only to draw her in the first single-elimination round and be sent home 9-3. 38 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Another young player to have an exceptional tournament was Canada’s Rachael Abbink, a long-time road player and an infrequent face on the tour. Though the copper-tressed Abbink lost her first match to idol Jeanette “The Black Widow” Lee, she resurfaced to win three matches before going home with 17th place after being eliminated by Villareal, having earned another tour point. Ranked 22nd on the tour, Val Finnie of the U.K. was yet another young up-and-comer who had a great event. After being sent to the left side of the chart by Kim Shaw 9-7, she came out the 9-5 winner of a tough match against the Northeast’s Pam Treadway, bested Miyuki Sakai in a double-hill match, and then eliminated fellow countrywoman Sarah Ellerby when Ellerby hooked herself for the 4 ball and fouled in another hill-hill bout. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:54 AM Page 39 She went on to the final 16 but was ousted unceremoniously by defending champion Karen Corr by a whopping 9-0 score. Finnie’s road partner Kelly Fisher, who is ranked number three on the tour, also made it to the top 16, winning over Ashton, Angel Pagia, and Helena Thornfeldt in the one-loss side to meet up with Pan. She led in that match to reach the hill first, only to foul on a jump shot and allow Pan to make it 8-all. When Pan played safe on the 2 ball in the final rack, Fisher was able to hit the ball but left it open, and Pan cleared the table. When it came down to the final 16 in the singleelimination format, oddly enough, the matches were fairly one-sided. The WPBA’s top player, Allison Fisher, eliminated fellow countrywoman Shaw 9-2, while Hofstatter ended Ewa Laurance’s tournament 9-3. Ga-Young Kim ousted Tracie Hines 9-1, and Corr whitewashed Finnie 9-0. Villareal knocked out Lee 9-2, and Nelson eliminated Steinman 9-3. Kim White put up a fight against Monica Webb but lost 9-5, and Pan and Fisher entertained the crowd with their hill-hill match that saw Pan advance. The lopsided matches continued in the next round, with Hofstatter unable to catch a break against Fisher, who reached the hill 80. At that point, “G-Force” put together a run but was still unable to avert the inevitable, as Fisher finally swept past with a 9-5 win. Pan also dominated her match against Nelson and reached an 8-2 lead—she allowed Nelson two more racks before crossing the finish line. Both of the other two matches were about as close as they could be. Kim and Webb fought tooth and nail, with the score seesawing to 7-all. A safety on the 1 ball by Kim led to her reaching the hill, and then another safety battle over the 4 ball gave Kim the last rack to win 9-7. The spirited Villareal and Corr were also at 7-all when Villareal made a bank on the 8 ball after a Corr safety to reach the hill. Then, with ball in hand in the final rack, Villareal announced, “I can get out from here!” and she did, winning 9-7. Defending champion Karen Corr was stopped in her tracks this year by Vivian Villareal. Atlanta ’s Monica Webb, ranked fourth on the WPBA, concentrates in her match against Ga-Young Kim. One Step Closer A grueling hill-hill match against Nicole Albergaria (née Mancini) led to victory and another tour point for Canada’s Rachael Abbink at this event. She needed to win two matches at the Carolina Classic to gain another tour point and now only needs one more point to reach active pro status. After a 9-3 loss to Jeanette Lee Thursday evening, Abbink faced off against Gail Grecar Friday morning at 10 a.m. and triumphed 9-3. Her next match against Albergaria saw both players trade games as the score seesawed to 6-5 Abbink. As Albergaria faltered, Abbink took the hill with her soft break working in her favor. A nice bank on the 7 ball put Albergaria one step closer to the goal, and then a missed 6 ball by Abbink handed Albergaria another game. Albergaria made it a doublehill match when Abbink scratched on the 7 ball, leaving only one game to decide the winner. Albergaria fired the cue ball into the corner pocket on the last break, and after trading innings several times throughout the game, Albergaria left the door open by hanging the 5 ball. Abbink calmly sized up the remaining balls and pocketed them with aplomb, spearing in her final 9 ball for the win. Abbink went on to win her next match against Belgium snooker champ Wendy Jans in a fairly one-sided battle that saw her dominate her opponent. Up 8-4, Abbink made nothing on her break, but when Jans missed the penultimate ball, Abbink was out like a flash. Her tournament ended against Vivian Villareal, who went on to take fourth place in the event. www.InsidePOOLmag.com 39 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:57 AM Page 40 You Gotta Have Heart The final four ladies returned Sunday afternoon for the taped matches, with Fisher and Kim starting off the show. In the first three games, Fisher only shot once—coming up dry on the break, which immediately led to a 3-0 lead for Kim. A rattled 1 by Fisher in the following rack gave Kim another game, but the Brit got on the board in the next when Kim scratched on the 5 ball, making it 4-1. Kim, playing her incredibly aggressive game, took the next two racks in a row, really putting the pressure on Fisher, who scratched on her next break. It looked as if it might be over, but Kim underhit the 2 ball and left it in the side pocket. Fisher cleaned up that rack, but when Kim played safe on the 3 ball in the last rack, Fisher fouled, and Kim dished up to win 7-2. With the way Villareal was playing that week, it was expected that her match with Pan would be closer than the preceding semifinal. Villareal drew first blood in this match after Pan missed a tough 8-9 combo down the rail, but soon Pan surpassed her, taking advantage of Villareal’s unsuccessful attempts at defensive play. Villareal came up empty on the break in the seventh rack, and Pan cleared the table to reach the hill 6-1. But Pan missed the 1 ball in the following rack, and Villareal was out, claiming, “I’ve got too much heart!” A foul by Pan gave the next rack to Villareal as well, but when Villareal pushed out and left her opponent a shot, Pan took the ball and ran with it, clearing the difficult layout to win the second semifinal 7-3. Known to her many fans as “The Texas Tornado,” Vivian Villareal is one of the most popular players in the sport. Tournament director Steve Tipton watches carefully as Allison Fisher attempts a dicey shot. 40 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 54-April-2007 3/6/07 4:58 AM Page 41 All-Asian Final Match Commences It was a fight between China and Korea when Xiaoting Pan and Ga-Young Kim met in the finals—as tournament director Steve Tipton put it, “The Asian Invasion is now in full force in North Carolina.” Tipton also praised the sheer elegance of both ladies, which was striking. The match was a complete seesaw battle from start to finish, unlike the two semifinals. Things started off excitingly enough when Kim, who won the lag, caromed into the 9 ball after making the 1, pocketing both. From there the ladies traded racks one after another. Finally Pan reached the hill first with a sporty bank on the 6 ball with Kim still at 4, but the latter made it a double-hill thriller after two separate scratches by Pan handed Kim two more racks. The final game was a lesson in excellent defense, with neither player gaining an inch. Going for the gusto, Pan attempted a 3-9 combo, missing but leaving Kim hooked. Kim tried to play a kick-safe but ended up sending the 3 into the corner pocket and leaving herself no shot on the 4. She was forced to tie it up with the 6 ball, and Pan smartly played safe by putting the 4 behind the 6. She might’ve just forgotten that Kim had just kicked in a very difficult shot on the 3. At any rate, Kim coolly one-rail kicked in the 4 with flair. Left with five balls on the table and the crowd going absolutely wild, Kim was able to clean up, winning the final match 7-6. Having come so far in such a short amount of time—she earned Rookie of the Year in 2006—to end up in second place, Pan was visibly disappointed. Kim, on the other hand, was thrilled to add another title to her resume. She thanked her sponsors, the crowd, and her friends and family in the ceremony afterward, adding, “I love them so much. I’m really happy!” Sponsors for this event included the American Poolplayers Association, Mueller Recreational Products, oZone Billiards, Iwan Simonis, Cuetec Cues, and Brunswick Billiards. Additionally, local sponsors included Stop & Shop, Nashville Building Supply, Pizza Hut, RBC Centura, Chick-fil-A, Eye Care Center of Rocky Mount, and Texas Steakhouse and Saloon.t Her graceful, elegant game won China ’s Xiaoting Pan many fans in Rocky Mount, NC, this year. 1st 2nd 3rd 5th 9th Results Ga-Young Kim Xiaoting Pan Allison Fisher Vivian Villareal Karen Corr Tiffany Nelson Monica Webb Gerda Hofstatter Kim Shaw Ewa Laurance Tracie Hines Kim White Morgan Steinman Kelly Fisher Jeanette Lee Val Finnie $13,500 $8,300 $5,400 $3,200 $2,200 To view an extensive online photo gallery of the Carolina Women’s Billiard Classic, please visit www.InsidePOOLmag.com. www.InsidePOOLmag.com 41 3/6/07 5:01 AM Page 42 W S C ? HAT'SINthe ASE by Sally P. Timko WITC Since his arrival on the American pool scene almost two years ago, “Dynamite” Darren Appleton has made a positive impression on everyone he meets—with the exception, perhaps, of his unlucky opponents. He is personable, charming, and always ready with a smile. Having been introduced to English 8-ball pool at 15, he has now been playing pool for half his life, as he is now 30 (“Getting old!”). His cousin took Darren to pool events that he was participating in, and it turned out that Darren had a knack for the game. It must run in the family, for not only does his cousin play recreationally, but Darren’s brother Shane is in the top 16 in the world at English 8-ball pool. “The first time I entered [a tournament], I managed to win it. That’s when I knew that I was going to play pool. At the time, I was also boxing as well and I was very good at football. I would’ve liked to have picked soccer, but you’ve got to be very lucky to get the scouts and getting picked up,” explained Darren about his career choice. Though he dominated the UK-based game, he realized that there just was not a lot of money in it and began branching out into American pool. Despite the difference in size—English 8ball pool is played on 7-foot tables with smaller baller and longer cues—he adjusted quite well. Well enough, in fact, to take first place at the BCA Men’s Grand Master event in 2006, a huge win for an almost-unheard-of player from Pontefract, West Yorkshire . “Daz” was chosen to be on the International Pool Tour and had a high finish with them, as well as a fifth-place finish at the 2006 U.S. Open 9-Ball Championship and a second-place finish on the Euro Tour. For the past 18 months or so, Darren has been traveling—he went all over Europe, America , and the Philippines . He stated that he is regarded as one of the top money players in the world in his hometown, and obviously his reputation preceded him to the States, for he experiences trouble sometimes finding games. “It’s difficult to go on the road looking for money matches,” he verified. “I just like to set a match up and play it, where players are looking to steal all the time and looking for weight.” Does he think a pool player can make a decent living? “I think you can make a little bit of a living. Someone like me, who’s got a sponsor or a backer, has got to travel around and you’ve got WITC WITC 54-April-2007 WITC 42 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 to be successful. Obviously it’s difficult for anyone.” Darren is sponsored by www.WrightOnCue.com, as are his mates Karl Boyes and Mick Hill. “I want to try to get to the top,” he explained, “but what I’m worried about is that I’m pretty well known in the American terms, and I feel as though I haven’t done anything yet—I haven’t won anything big. I finished good in the U.S. Open and the IPT once, but I want to get to the same level as Reyes, Johnny Archer, Strickland, and players like them.” If you haven’t seen Darren play yet, there is no need to fear—unless you’re a possible opponent. He is seriously considering uprooting from West Yorkshire and moving to pool’s mecca, Florida , later in 2007.t C the 3/6/07 5:03 AM ? Page 43 WITC ? EQUIPMENT STATSEQUIPMENT STATSEQUIPMENT WITC 54-April-2007 WITC Darren Appleton Playing Cue: Weight: Wrap: Shaft: Break Cues: Tips: Wrap: Shafts: Predator 19 ounces Irish linen Z Shaft 11.5 millimeters Pro taper Paul Mottey jump/break cue One phenolic, one leather Leather 12.5-12.75 ounces Pro taper Case: Other: Sterling black-brown leather 2 x 4 case with brass accents The Protector (for breaking) Fine-grit sandpaper 8 ball towel www.InsidePOOLmag.com 43 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:05 AM Page 44 BY FRED AGNIR CUE MAKER’S CORNER Dennis Dieckman Cue Builder He doesn’t make cues. He builds them. Let’s get that straight. It’s a semantic difference, yes, but an important one. A wish is made. Pudding is made. But a bridge is built. A house is built. A cue is built. The term “make” suggests the transformation of tangible or intangible items into something different, often completely unrecognizable from the individual item. However, the term “build” suggests the action of piecing together parts one by one to make a whole, with the goal to build something that lasts. To understand the subtle difference in the words is to understand the man. Welcome to the world of Dennis Dieckman, cue builder. Building a Base “When I build a cue, I’m also building a relationship,” explained Dennis. He’s been building relationships with his cues for over 30 years. So much so that with the network of friendships he’s built with customers and students, he has the fortune of being accommodated by his friends on his global travels. Dennis Dieckman grew up in Ann Arbor, MI. After a brief stint at the University of Michigan, the draft took Dieckman to Vietnam for 33 months. On his return, the G.I. bill gave him the opportunity to return to the University, where he received a degree in linguistics. He is a lifelong pool and billiard enthusiast, often playing Cowboy Billiards, a game combining pocketing and carom skills. At the Michigan campus billiards room, Dennis met Carl Conlon, a world-class three-cushion billiards player and former Michigan football player. Carl traveled the world playing threecushion up until his passing in 1997. Dennis purchased a carom cue with a wooden pin from Conlon. “It was the first two-piece cue that I ever had in my hands that felt like a solid one-piece cue,” said Dennis. Up until that point, he hadn’t found a twopiece cue that he wasn’t “aware of the joint” when he hit with it. Meeting Conlon piqued his interest in learning more about three-cushion billiards. “I played a game of nine-ball, put the nine-ball in the pocket, and scratched,” said Dieckman. “I literally did not play pool after that for another ten years.” Meeting Conlon also piqued his interest in learning more about building cues. In 1971, he purchased a lathe. “I bought a wood lathe and started building cues,” said Dennis. “And they sucked!” He started to do repair work on tips and ferrules, but he knew he would eventually need something better. W 44 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Dennis also started the habit of buying wood. “I believe in wood. I’m fortunate to come from Michigan, where there’s a lot of good maple. That’s the only American wood suitable for cues.” stated Dieckman emphatically. On a trip to purchase wood in 1971, Dennis met Eddie Laube in Chicago. Eddie had been in the process of getting out of the cue business and had already sold his equipment to Frank “Sailor of Racine” Stellman. Striking a great friendship, Dennis visited Laube several time over the next 18 months. Laube would describe to Dennis how he built cues, showing to Dennis the various cue parts that he still had. “I would be sitting at his kitchen table, and he would have a parakeet on his shoulder while he was talking to me,” shared Dieckman. Not able make a living at cues, Dennis found himself living in Nebraska and going to law school. A friend called him to come back to Ann Arbor to run his new private gaming club. Ever the free spirit, Dieckman dropped out of law school to help out his friend. He made a deal with his friend that he would help get things up and running, hire people, and take care of the operation for several months if the gaming club would buy him a precision lathe. After nine months in 1979, Dennis left the gaming club, and the club honored its deal by purchasing a Logan precision lathe for him. R 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:07 AM Page 45 Dennis has met with several other cue builders along the way, including Chicago’s Burton Spain and Ray Schuler, both of whom have since passed. Dennis and Ray would have many philosophical discussions on cues, as both were carom enthusiasts. “I also had dinner with Burton at every event that we attended,” said Dennis. “We never talked cues. We both had too many other interests to talk about.” Dennis also visited Bert Schrager’s shop in California in the late ‘70s. His travel through California gave Dennis the opportunity to meet with U.S. billiard champions Allen Gilbert, Harry Sims, and Frank Torres, to name a few. Making a Living In addition to trying his hand out at cues, Dennis was also building custom chess and backgammon boards. “I discovered I could hardly feed myself,” recalled Dennis. Fortunately, he had a fall-back position: His first love was golf. He had previously worked for the Michigan University Golf Course. He returned to the Michigan University Golf Course and eventually, in the next ten years, became a member of the Professional Golfers Association (PGA) as a teaching club professional. He was one of the early pioneers in the use of video as a teaching tool. Because the golf course closed for the winter, Dennis could work on cues three or four months of the year. Golf also brought him opportunities that would carry him across the country, including stints in Ohio, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. As in Michigan, he would run the golf course and teach lessons. In the off season, he would return to Ann Arbor where his equipment resided and would churn out cues. “I would burn fifty to sixty hours a week building mostly billiard cues. I didn’t really know what a pool cue was at the time,” revealed Dennis. “Mostly I would be building on speculation.” Eventually he left the golf profession. “I got tired of it, working with fifty-year-old people acting like they were in high school,” joked Dieckman. He again tried his had at cue building full-time. He went back to Michigan and moved his equipment into a house his friend Steve Titus was building. Steve would eventually try his hands on the equipment and later went on to partner with Allen McCarty to develop the Predator Cue. One of a handful of cues built for the Smithsonian, below is the cue prior to assembly. Building the Future In 1994, Dennis finally purchased the home in which he and his equipment currently reside. After buying the house, he started to write. When he was teaching golf, he thought that video instruction would be good for cue-building as well, so he wrote instructional material and made videos. The videos have proven successful, as he is now on his third edition. Additionally, he has written a multitude of cue-building articles, all of which he has made available on his website. “I’m a teacher,” stated Dennis. He started to take in students soon after he bought the house. If a person wants to be a cue maker, Dieckman has nothing for them. He reminds them that he builds cues. Just like the Egyptians built the pyramids, Dennis builds cues and he builds them to last. He instills that idea into his students. He calls his cue-building course the Cueniversity, a ten-day boot camp targeted to give a would-be cue builder the hands-on knowledge to start his own business. The course includes setting up and using the machines, learning about wood, how to keep accounting, and even how to cook. Dennis warns people who come to his course not to bring their golf clubs or cue stick. There won’t be any time for playing. www.InsidePOOLmag.com 45 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:10 AM Page 46 Some students stay longer than the ten days. “I have apprentices in the shop now who come in and spend several hours,” said Dieckman. “When they get to a point where they think they know more than I do, they move on. That’s how it goes.” Students include cue builders from around the globe, including Japan, Australia, Holland, and South Africa. His U.S. students include the highly regarded Dave Barenbrugge of Arizona. “What makes me proud is that the people I’ve taught are building really good cues. Some have surpassed me,” admitted Dieckman. “I’m playing catch-up to them. They are making me a better cue builder! When Dave Barenbrugge calls and says that he figured out something and wants to tell me about it, I listen. That’s the teacher learning something from the student.” Ideally, Dieckman wants to build fewer and fewer cues. That being said, he continues to build cue parts for future assembly. At any time in his shop, he has over a thousand shaft blanks and over three hundred butt blanks hanging in various stages. “I make twenty to thirty cues a year, so I have enough butt blanks that I don’t have to build another one for ten years!” That being said, he still buys wood. “The cost of wood is always going to go up,” continued Dieckman. “It’s like money in the bank, as far as I’m concerned, because it’s never going to get any cheaper.” A selfprofessed sucker for wood, if any of his friends tell him about a good deal on wood, he’s off and running to purchase some. He still has boards that he purchased over 25 years ago. Making Friends, Building Relationships His cues reflect his philosophy, his character, and his personality. Although he started with building carom cues only, he also builds pool cues. He offers several standard joint configurations and is one of the few cue builders who can offer a traditional wooden joint pin seen in carom cues. He also is one of the earliest users of the G10 glass-reinforced epoxy pin that has recently been gaining popularity. He doesn’t add any metal to the cues apart from a metal joint pin. And Dennis Dieckman doesn’t and will never use ivory. As a devotee to wood, he also stays away from inlaying minerals and gemstones. “My cues are my children,” he stated. “I don’t want to put them in the hands of child molesters.” He has turned down customers who intend to resell his cues and those who have committed the ultimate sin: purposefully snapping one of his cues. “I only sell cues to people I like,” he continued. “They’re customers, yes, but they’re also friends. If I sell a cue to a new customer, I’m starting a friendship. I’m building a relationship. “My cues don’t define who I am,” averred Dennis. “But cue-building is a medium that has allowed me to meet wonderful people and to build relationships.” The cues may not define him, but they are part of him. They are part of the friendships that he has built and part of the reputation he has built. He is Dennis Dieckman, builder of cues.t 46 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 illustration by Jorge Rubio 47_0407.pdf 3/6/07 2:41 PM Page 47 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:16 AM Page 48 On Board With the BCA Change is Gonna Come by Rob Johnson, BCA Executive Director I If you heard the news already about the changes at the Billiard Congress of America, you are probably wondering what precipitated the change. The BCA conducted a landmark study of its business members in hopes of getting some frank feedback that would be useful in setting the strategic direction of the organization in the future. I am pleased to report that the response rate to our survey was very high. This certainly indicates that the members have a genuine interest in their trade organization. It also means we can trust the responses because all member types responded at statistically significant levels. “So what did they say?” Across the board, our membership clearly stated a desire for the BCA to emphasize marketing, research, strategic planning, and corporate services to directly aid in the improvement of their businesses. Meeting those needs is a tall order, one that the Board of Directors and I realized we needed assistance with. The board determined the best way to meet these needs is through a partnership with a firm that brings to the table a particular expertise in association management and member benefit fulfillment. The name of the firm the board selected to help with this is Meeting Expectations. Meeting Expectations is an exciting, energetic, and strategic firm with years of experience helping organizations just like ours provide enhanced services to association members. By combining their skill and energy with the team I am moving to our new headquarters offices in the Denver area, I know we will have the ingredients to make the BCA more beneficial to all our members and a powerful tool for the industry in general. We have already begun the process of gathering information on the industry and consumer perceptions of the billiard industry. We’ll be presenting information gathered from our consumer survey at the International Billiard & Home Recreation Expo in June. Visit www.bca-expo.com regularly for more information on this seminar, featured guest speakers, and special events we are planning. We’re excited about all the new prospects that these changes will bring and expect to carry the concept “it’s a whole new game” to all new heights throughout 2007. This is just the beginning. Our team is energized and ready to develop and deliver new and improved services from the BCA. You will also witness the transformation of BCA into an even more responsive and more strategic organization. In the meantime, keep your head down and follow through! me 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:19 AM Page 49 INDUSTRYNEWS 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:21 AM Page 50 INDUSTRY NEWS VIKING CUE JUNIOR 9-BALL TOUR The Viking Cue 9-Ball Tour, the largest and longest-running open regional tour in the U.S., with over $90,000 in added prize money each year, announced the creation of another 9-ball tour bearing the Viking Cues brand name as the title sponsor: the Viking Cue Junior 9-Ball Tour. This new tour compliments their other tours, which are the Viking Cue Open, Ladies, and Amateur 9-Ball Tours. The new Viking Cue Junior 9-Ball Tour will cater to all players in four divisions (19 & under boys, 14 & under boys, 19 & under girls and 14 & under girls) and will consist of up to eight 9-ball tournaments with four divisions each that will be sanctioned by the Billiard Education Foundation (BEF). All events are qualifiers for the BEF's Junior National 9-Ball Championships, with the winner receiving an entry into the BEF's Junior National 9Ball Championships. Additionally, the winners of each 19 & under boys and 19 & under girls events will receive a brand new Viking cue. There will be no Viking Cue 9-Ball Tour card fees for the junior division; however, all participants must be members of the BEF, which has an annual membership of only $15. Participants can purchase their BEF membership cards at any of the Viking Cue Junior 9-Ball Tour events. Additional fees will only be $5 for table time per player at each event. The Viking Cue Open 9-Ball Tour also offers another benefit to junior players age 17 and under: Junior and non-professional women players receive free entries and tour cards into all of the Open Tour events. The new Junior Tour events have been strategically scheduled to coincide with Viking Tour Open events so that all participants can take advantage of both programs. BENEFITS FOR 2007 BEF JUNIOR BILLIARDS 1. Annual Membership Fee: $15.00 50 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 2. Junior Billiards Membership Card Upon completing and returning the application form, each new member will receive a Junior Billiards membership card. Payment must be directed to: Billiard Education Foundation, PO Box 818, Lafayette, CO 80026. Membership applications must be filled out completely to ensure prompt processing. 3. BEF Academic All-American Awards & Increased Scholarship Opportunities Junior billiards members can apply for the BEF Academic All-American Awards (3.5 GPA) and be the first to receive the BEF Academic Scholarship Program application for the opportunity to compete for thousands of dollars in college scholarships. 4. Eligibility a. All BEF junior billiards members are eligible to compete in any BEF Junior National Qualifier throughout the year. b. Members who place first at the Junior National Qualifier will earn entry to the 2007 BEF Junior National 9-Ball Championships. c. Junior National finalists will compete for a position on Team USA to represent the U.S. at the 2007 World Pool-Billiard Association (WPA) Junior World Championships. To be eligible, players must not turn 19 prior to December 31, 2006. d. All Junior billiards members are eligible to compete in any junior league. e. All junior billiards members competing in a junior league and completing four weeks of play are eligible to compete in the BEF Junior Nationals through a league operator appointment. If.all players, other than registered league winners, must qualify through a local BEF Junior National Qualifier in order to earn entry into the BEF Junior National Championships and must become members of the BEF Junior Billiards Program. g.Non-U.S. citizens are eligible to be junior billiards members and compete in the junior billiards events, including the Junior National 9-Ball Championships, if they reside permanently in North America. They are not eligible to be members of Team USA nor to compete in the WPA Junior World Championships supported by the Billiard Congress of America. LARRY NEVEL JOINS TIGER TEAM Tiger Products is pleased to welcome a new team member, top pro player Larry Nevel, as a player representative. The 32year-old Beloit, WI, resident stated, “I am very happy and see a very bright future for this relationship.” He added, “I am very impressed by the overall playability of Tiger cues and the Tiger X laminated shaft.” Some of Larry’s career highlights include being the 2006 Southern Classic One-Pocket champion, the 2005 Carolinas Open 9-Ball champion, the 2003 Derby City Classic All-Around champion, 2002 Viking Tour National champion, and the 2000 Wisconsin State champion. Established in Canoga Park, CA, in 1988, Tiger Products is the leading U.S. manufacturer of specialty laminated billiards products and accessories. Tiger brand laminated cue tips, including the Sniper; Everest; Tiger Jump/Break; and Tiger Soft, Medium, and Hard, are known throughout the world as some of the best. Look for the recently introduced Tiger Professional Cue Series. For more information on their products, visit their website at http://www.tigerproducts.com. COREY HARPER NEW HOUSE PRO FOR BLUE MARBLE BILLIARDS To help promote and market their new Internet venture, Blue Marble Billiards ( www.bluemarblebilliards.com) has welcomed pro pool player Corey Harper as their official house pro and player representative. Some of Corey’s recent highlights include being the IPT North American Open 8-Ball Qualifier Winner, United States player representative at the 2004 WPA World Pool Championships in Chinese Taipei, and runner-up for the 2003 UPA Pro Tour Rookie of the Year. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:24 AM Page 51 Located in foothills of beautiful Pasadena, CA, Blue Marble Billiards was created as a labor of love. With 20 years in the game, their extensive industry experience fostered the need for an Internet vehicle to showcase their passion and love for the sport. They are committed to providing quality billiards products at competitive prices and sharing their knowledge about this great sport with all our customers to the betterment of the game. PARENT COMPANY OF ARAMITH ACQUIRES THE C.L. BAILEY CO. OLHAUSEN BILLIARDS HONORED AT LOCAL HOSPITAL Olhausen Billiard Manufacturing, Inc. is proud to have participated in the grand opening ceremonies for the Brockton, VA, hospital recreation center. The newly remodeled billiard room was graciously dedicated to Olhausen for their outstanding support of VA Medical Facilities all over the country. Three years ago Olhausen donated (in conjunction with their authorized dealer; seasonal specialty stores in Foxboro, MA); an 8-foot Americana pool table. In January 2006 the Brockton facility was desperate to replace their second pool table and once again called upon Olhausen for support. Olhausen graciously offered another 8-foot Americana, and in turn the Brockton, MA, VA facility was kind enough to dedicate their poolroom to Olhausen. Sue Doyle, marketing director of Olhausen, was on hand to participate in the ribbon-cutting ceremony. The ceremony took place on Valentine’s Day with tremendous support from the vets living in the facility, as well as many outside agencies that continuously support the efforts of the VA facility in the Brockton, MA, area. Special mention should be made to honor Mickey Emory of The DAV (Disabled American Veteran’s) for his tireless work in supporting the VA all over the country. Mike Small of Seasonal Specialty Stores in Foxboro, MA, was on hand for the ceremonies as well as Andy “The Magic Man” Segal, who entertained the crowd with great trick shots and his enthusiastic humor and personality. INTERNATIONAL CUE COLLECTORS’ SHOW The International Cue Collectors’ Show will be held October 18-20, 2007, at the Magnolia Hotel in downtown Houston, TX. This is a first-class property with glamorous rooms, a full bar and restaurant, and a billiard room. To locate it, please log onto www.magnoliahotelhouston.com. To make a reservation, please call (888) 915-1110 and mention the ICCS or the International Cue Collectors Show to get the negotiated rate of $159. Fridays’ cue show will incorporate a the cocktail party and will be open only to collectors, cue makers, and guests paying the registration fee. The show on Saturday is open to the general public. Participating cue makers are to display a minimum of five cues. One cue must be their low line model and one cue must be a cue based on a theme of their choice. These new rules should provide a cue in everyone’s price range. At 3:00 p.m. Friday each of the invited cue makers will present one cue for www.InsidePOOLmag.com 51 INDUSTRY NEWS The Armand Capital Group, a Chicago private equity firm and parent company of Belgium-based Saluc SA, maker of the famous Aramith billiard balls (www.aramith.com), has acquired the C.L. Bailey Co., a Marionville, MO, manufacturer and distributor of pool tables, gameroom furniture, and billiard accessories. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. According to Denis Mola, chairman of Armand Capital, “We are a private investing group that has an objective to build an international portfolio of participations in financially strong companies active in the billiard sector. When Charlie Bailey, the president of C.L. Bailey, initially approached us, we quickly recognized the quality of the company and its potential. The C.L. Bailey Co. has an outstanding management team, attractive product lineup, and a well-established customer base. Saluc, with its Aramith product line, is the billiard industry’s most recognized interna- tional trade brand. We intent to leverage the Aramith brand and global distribution network via product line extensions that bring added value to billiard retailers in North America and abroad.” Chuck Bailey, general manager, and Shine Lee, operations manager, will continue in their current management capacity and will report to Curt Bossuyt, managing director of Saluc. All three managers will become members of the company’s management committee. Industry veteran Curt Cook will continue as the national sales manager for the company. Moving forward, the company will operate under the Armand Billiards Group name. “The Armand Billiards Group name better communicates the company’s common ownership with Saluc and the wide selection of billiard products offered under the Aramith, C.L. Bailey, Fischer, The Level Best, and Velocity brands” stated Curt Bossuyt. Apart from the Bailey Company adding the Aramith products in its billiard accessories line, there will be no changes to Aramith’s current distribution network in North America. For more information on the company or its products, please contact the Armand Billiards Group at 877-2581963, or visit www.armandbilliards.com. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:26 AM Page 52 the collectors to consider for the Collectors’ Choice award. Also new this year will be the “Lone Star Collection.” Billy Stroud has commissioned the invited cue makers to each produce a cue based on Texas themes. This is a rich heritage and should produce some spectacular cues. This collection will have a reserve price and will be offered to the highest bidder via a silent auction. If you are interested in bidding, please contact Mr. Stroud directly at bill@cues.com or 505378-5677. INDUSTRY NEWS A.E. SCHMIDT CREATES POOL TABLE THAT DOUBLES AS A DINING TABLE A. E. Schmidt Billiard Company has been in business for more than 150 years, and it is still coming up with new ideas and custom pool tables. In 2007, the company is introducing 25 new table designs. One of its latest designs includes a pool table that can be converted into a dining table. “The dining table is modern and elegant, with clean lines and a simple design, and really looks beautiful in the home,” A.E. Schmidt Billiard Company owner Kurt Schmidt said. Because A.E. Schmidt is one of few remaining United States-based manufacturers of pool tables, the company is able to create custom tables based on customers’ visions and lifestyles. The dining table was inspired by one family who did not have the space for both a pool table and a dining table. “This table really is perfect for the whole family,” Schmidt said. “It’s a beautiful wood table that looks elegant in any home but also a lot more fun than your standard dining table.” The project took seven trial and errors, Schmidt said, but they eventually got it right. This custom table is different than other dining pool tables on the market because people can pull their chairs up to the table as they would with a normal dining table. 52 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 The dining table is one in a series of 25 new table designs A.E. Schmidt is developing this year. Schmidt says they are working to meet changing market demands, in part because of an influx of Chinese products and also the Internet. Schmidt says he designs tables to be custom and unique, and he avoids mainstream and look-a-like designs. “Our team works together to provide the best quality and craftsmanship for our customers, and we’ve been doing this for more than one hundred and fifty years,” Schmidt said. The A.E. Schmidt Company, founded by Ernst Schmidt in 1850, has been restoring and creating custom pool tables in St. Louis for more than 150 years. The family business continues its legacy under the fifth generation leadership of Kurt and Karen Schmidt and delivers the highest-quality pool tables, supplies, and restoration and repair services. A.E. Schmidt has two retail locations in St. Louis. For more information, visit www.aeschmidtbilliards.com or call 800-325-9676. NEW MAZZCO BILLIARDS CATALOG & WEBSITE Mazzco Billiards, formerly Mazzco’s Retail Billiard Division and now a division of HAPP, is pleased to announce the release of its new full color retail billiards catalog. This 48-page catalog carries a wide variety of products for the retail billiards industry. Some of the quality products included in this catalog are McDermott Cues, Championship Cloth, Silver Cup Chalk, Tournament Soccer Tables, Valley/Dynamo Parts and more. Additionally, they are pleased to announce the launch of its new website for the retail billiards industry: www.mazzcobilliards.com. This website allows customers to order all their retail billiards needs online with a secure server. They are continually enhancing their product line and adding products to their website regularly. Visit them at www.mazzcobilliards.com. STROKE IT WEAR® TO SPONSOR TONY CROSBY Stroke It Wear®, one of Florida’s newest, top-quality sportswear companies, has agreed to an exclusive sponsorship arrangement with top pro Tony “The Sniper” Crosby. This sponsorship agreement is the first professional sports sponsorship deal entered into by Stroke it Wear®. And the timing couldn’t have been better. Tony just returned from the World Championships held in Manila, Philippines, where he pulled off an incredible upset by defeating Efren “Bata” Reyes in front of a worldwide audience estimated to be over 250 million viewers. Stroke It Wear® had been pursuing Tony for several months, as he was their first choice to represent their company. Tony is respected worldwide for his professionalism, good character, and disarming personality both on tour and in his personal life. Stroke It Wear® carries billiards apparel for both men and women: T-shirts, sweatshirts, hats, athletic apparel as well as girls’ intimates. For more information on Stroke it Wear® and to view their current line of sportswear, please visit them on the web at www.strokeitwear.com. FRED MALI PASSES AWAY On February 1, 2007, the billiard world lost a great friend in Frederick Johnston Mali , president and CEO of Henry W.T. Mali and Co. and the founder of Mali Cues. Born October 5, 1930, in New York City and was educated at Buckley, Groton, Yale 54-April-2007 3/7/07 2:52 PM Page 53 and Harvard Business School , where he earned an MBA. He served his country in the US Army between the wars. Fred passed away peacefully at home surrounded by his family and friends and is survived by his wife of 30 years, H.S.H. Princess Lucretia Obolensky. Fred was the great-grandson of John Taylor Johnston, the principal founder of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the greatgreat-grandson of abolitionist Lucretia Mott, and the first cousin eight times removed of Benjamin Franklin. He was the fifth generation to run his family’s firm, HWT Mali & Co., the oldest continuously family-run company in New York City , as president and CEO. InsidePoolmag.com The Billiard Congress of America (BCA), the industry trade association for the billiards equipment and establishment sectors, will partner with Atlanta-based Meeting New Look - Same Great Website ° ° ° ° ° ° ° Billiard News Contests Downloads Games Forum Photo Galeries Online Store ...and much more! INDUSTRY NEWS BILLIARD CONGRESS TO CHANGE MANAGEMENT STRUCTURE, MOVE OFFICES Expectations, a strategic consulting firm specializing in providing services to national trade associations. The BCA’s International Billiard & Home Recreation Trade Show (set for Las Vegas in June) highlights innovation in billiards, including pool tables and supplies for home recreation use as well as commercial billiard enterprises. Meeting Expectations will provide membership, marketing, financial, IT, and administrative services to the BCA. The contract with the firm begins in March, as the BCA reduces staff. “Our membership has clearly stated a desire for the BCA to emphasize enhanced marketing, research, and strategic business improvement services, and we believe the best way to meet such needs is through a partnership with a seasoned organization such as Meeting Expectations” said BCA CEO Rob Johnson. Johnson also announced that the BCA will relocate its national office to Denver in May, citing the convenience of the Denver International Airport for regular meetings of the BCA national directors. “Our goal is twofold; increasing efficiency and exceeding the expectations of the BCA’s members,” said Brian Meyer, president of Meeting Expectations. “This partnership will enable the board to focus on providing guidance to the organization in order to ensure improved member satisfaction through marketing-oriented services. We will also assist the BCA with strategic planning by sharing the best practices we've developed through our years of experience in the association management field” Johnson said restructuring with Meeting Expectations will allow the BCA to become more responsive to the membershipâ?™s desire for marketing-enhanced services such as information on consumer attitudes and opinions relative to the billiard industry, trends within the industry, business improvement tips and seminars, and consumer marketing programs. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 T Page 54 EAGUE EPORT OF THE EAGUE PLAYER MONTH L L Thom Jordan of Berkeley, IL, is the APA Player of the Month for April. He is a member of the Dupage County APA and has been playing in the league for more than 16 years. In that time Thom has over notched 1,000 matches played and has been on three teams that have qualified for the $25,000 8-Ball National Championship in Las Vegas. He plays on a team five nights a week—every night that APA league play is offered in his area. Thom serves on the Dupage County APA Board of L E A G U E P L A Y E R o f t h e M O N T H LPM 5:31 AM 54 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 R Directors and helps out wherever he can with the league. He drops off and picks up score sheets for most teams, helps with updating local bylaws each session, and even serves as a referee for tournaments when needed. “Thom has a reputation for being patient, calm, fair, and easy to talk to. He is very wellrespected and liked by his fellow members and is a definite asset to the APA in DuPage,” said league operator Joe Parrillo. Thom Jordan 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:33 AM Page 55 54-April-2007 3/6/07 10:54 AM Page 56 SECOND BLAZE STOP GOES TO SAMBAJON C T. D E . M A. M D . M E . N H . N J . N Y. O H . PA. R I . V T. BLAZE 9-BALL TOUR / DICKSON CITY, PA by Jose Burgos Cosmo’s Billiards in Dickson City, PA, played hosted to the Blaze 9-Ball Tour the weekend of February 10-11. Topping a tough field of 52 others was Santos Sambajon Jr. of the Philippines, beating out players such as Pat McNally, Matt Krah, and fellow countryman Gandy Valle. Leading the top half of the bracket, Sambajon notched wins over Seth Harris 7-0, Al Waldo 7-1, Valle 7-4, Scott Hurley 7-3, and Joe Hong 7-5. Mike Miller led the bottom half, taking victories over Joe Bowman Jr. 7-6, David Abraham 7-4, Randy Schwager 7-4, and Cosmo 7-4. When Miller and Sambajon met in the battle for the hot seat, it resulted in a one-sided match that saw Sambajon pull away to a 7-4 win, sending Miller to the west side of the chart. Valle was waiting there for him, and though the Filipino held a commanding 5-1 lead, Miller came back and shocked Valle with a 6-5 victory to get another shot at Sambajon. Miller led 7-5 in the tight final match-up, but Sambajon was able to step up his game to win the next four racks, taking the match 9-7. FERNANDEZ FIGHTS BACK IN PEABODY by Marc Dionne NEW ENGLAND 9-BALL SERIES / PEABODY, MA Twenty-eight of the strongest players in the area came out to play for the total purse of $1,150 in prize money at Country Cue Billiards in Peabody, MA, the weekend of February 10-11. Dave Fernandez proved to be the most determined of them all, winning seven straight matches to reach the finals and defeat his opponent. After dropping his first match to Rick Gata 7-2, Fernandez had a long fight ahead of him. On the other side of the chart, Rich Ross went up against Randy Labonte in the hot seat match. It went neck and neck for the first ten games until Labonte made a shooting error that allowed Ross to take advantage. Ross won that game and then broke and ran the next rack to win the match 75. For 16 racks in the final match between Ross and Fernandez, the lead went back and forth until Ross made a mental mistake, handing the match and title to Fernandez 10-8, making this his fifth win of the season. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Dave Fernandez 5th Ed Derk Rich Ross Mike Nicaloro Randy Labonte 7th Rick Gata Shane Cote Philip Stevens Amie, room owner Cosmo, Santos Sambajon Jr. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th Santos Sambajon Jr. Mike Miller Gandy Valle Billy Kirschner Cosmo Joe Hong 7th Lee Holt Randy Schwager 9th Antonio Collozzi Scott Hurley Noel Bensurto Adam Keiler MORGRIDGE UNDEFEATED AT LEGENDS BILLIARDS NEW ENGLAND 9-BALL SERIES / PORTSMOUTH, NH to pull ahead and eliminate Rainey. In the by Rick Davis The February 17-18 stop of the New England 9-Ball Series pulled into Legends Billiards in Portsmouth, NH, where Roy Morgridge went undefeated through the 29-player field to take the top spot. On the winners’ side Morgridge and Steve Therien met in the hot seat match, where Morgridge walked away with the match 7-3 to reach the finals. Earlier action on the winners’ side saw local player Stewart Rainy defeat tour favorite Tom McGonagale and others before falling just short of the hot seat match. On the one-loss side Leal and Rainey each edged forward trying to reach the next round, but it was Leal who was able semifinals Therien took a strong win after a great comeback. With Leal out to a 5-1 lead, Therien took four racks to get even and then another pair to claim the set. Finally, with the finals at hand, the rematch between Morgridge and Therien took an extended race to 10 to decide the winner. With Morgridge still in stroke and Therien stuck in neutral, Morgridge took a 10-6 victory to go undefeated throughout the event. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Roy Morgridge Steve Therien Chris Leal Stewart Rainy 5th Mike Barbagello Lee French 7th Sam Khiey Ryan Hodsen 54-April-2007 3/6/07 10:51 AM Page 57 NORTHEAST PARK PICKS OFF THE THIRD BLAZE STOP BLAZE 9-BALL TOUR / BROOKLYN, NY by Rick Davis C T. Shin Park, room owner Sammie Wu, Adam Kielar 5th Mhet Vergara Billy Kirshner 7th Gandy Valle Robert Pole PUTNAM AND LAC CONTROL SEASON OPENERS TIGER POOL TOUR / HAGERSTOWN, MD N H . Shawn Putnam N J . N Y. O H . My-Hahn Lac 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th My-Hanh Lac 7th Kim Smith Pam Treadway Gwen Dickert Zinnie Panju 9th Kathy Friend Sueyen Rhee Marcie Hanifee Kathleen Lawless Malea Haacke Teresa Savage Dona Sellman www.InsidePOOLmag.com 57 V T. Shawn Putnam 7th Alan Duty Danny Mullhollen Shaun Wilkie BJ Ussery 9th Eric Moore Matt Krah Kevin West Richard Barney Justin Daniels Danny Green Greg Sabins R I . 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th PA. The Tiger Pool Tour’s 2007 season got underway February 1718 at Hagerstown Billiards in Hagerstown, MD, where a 113-player field emerged in the open division and 25 players mixed things up in the ladies’ division. My-Hanh Lac recovered nicely to comeback and claimed the ladies’ title, while Shawn Putnam kept firm control in the open division, winning the event undefeated. Putnam didn’t give up more than four racks in the race-to-7 format, and after six match wins he found himself in the hot seat match. Along with Putnam, Danny Mullhollen found his way to the hot seat match, and although most of wins were much closer, he had the credit of defeating a top Southeast player, B.J. Ussery, as well winning as an additional match, for he had not drawn an opening bye as Putnam did. On the one-loss side, many of the favorites were being handed pink slips. Mike Davis took a shocking first-round loss, and although he fought back five matches, he still had a disappointing finish. Shaun Wilkie, another top Northern player, also took a rough opening round, then after nine match wins on the loss-side he was forced to be satisfied with a top-eight finish. Amidst all this action, Matt Krah, another Northeast star, was slowly creeping through the field decimating opponents left and right to reach the quarterfinals. As the dust settled, the final few matches decided everyone’s fate. Putnam defeated Mullhollen to take the hot seat, and on the one-loss side Ussery flew past Krah only to wind up knocked out himself after Mullhollen eliminated him in the semifinals. With a rematch ready, Mullhollen came out swinging against Putnam, but “Big Bubba” would not be shaken as he defeated Mullhollen again, this time to claim the first-place finish. In the ladies’ division, new mom Pam Treadway put on a show as she hardly gave up more than three racks per match. After five wins, including defeating Zinnie Panju in the hot seat match, Treadway was sitting pretty. On the one-loss side it looked like Kathleen Lawless was mounting a comeback, although after four wins she fell short against Lac, who eliminated her in the quarterfinals. Sueyen Rhee also had some momentum, with five one-loss side wins of her own, but once again Lac stood in the way, besting her in the quarterfinals. Lac breezed past Panju in the semifinals and then dealt the final blow against Treadway after a double-hill battle in the finals to claim the tour’s first event. M E . by Rick Davis M D . Shin Park Adam Kielar Jeremey Sossie Tony Robles M A. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th D E . Besting the 47-player field, Shin Park came back through a tough run of one-loss side matches to claim the third tour stop of the Blaze 9-Ball Tour, hosted by Skyline Billiards in Brooklyn, NY, over the February 17-18 weekend. With the end of the event near, the winners’ side top four included past event winners and touring pros alike, although most received their pink slip well before it was expected. Jeremey Sossie blew past multi-time tour stop winner Gandy Valle 7-5, then slipped past top pro Tony Robles 7-6 to reach the hot seat match. Alongside Sossie in the hot seat match was Adam Kielar, who slipped past Santos Sambajon Jr. double-hill before sending Park to the west side. The hot seat match was no contest as Kielar scorched Sossie 7-3, using his experience to his advantage. On the one-loss side Park met Robles in the quarterfinals and advanced by a slim 6-5 margin, the second such defeat for Robles, who started the day on the winners’ side. Park, now in gear, blew past Sossie then, taking advantage of a rematch with Kielar, took the final match 7-4 to claim the top honors of the event. 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:37 AM Page 58 NORTHEAST STEINMAN TAKES JPNEWT OPENER IRELAND RULES IN NEW JERSEY J. PECHAUER NORTHEAST WOMEN’S TOUR / PARSIPPANY, NJ TRI-STATE TOUR / EAST RUTHERFORD , NJ InsidePOOL Magazine’s Amateur Player of the Year Morgan Steinman overcame a second-round loss to Caroline Pao to win the Pechauer NorthEast Women’s Tour opener. Hosted by Comet Billiards in Parsippany, NJ, this stop was held over the February 10-11 weekend. Morgan, the 2006 Player of the Year of two regional tours as well, started off with a win over Naomi Fingerhut but was sent to the left side of the chart by Pao with a 7-4 loss. From there she raced through her matches with wins over Susan Schmidt, Carol Clark, Gail Glazebrook, Kathleen Lawless, Supadra Boonpasook, Kathy Friend, and Sharon O’Hanlon before her rematch with Pao in the finals. Caroline posted wins over Judie Wilson, Steinman, Cyndi Haefner, The latest offering from the Tri-State Tour took place February 24 at Castle Billiards in East Rutherford, NJ, where a 25-player field was bested by Jim Ireland, who remained undefeated through the event. Ireland quickly reached the hot seat match, where he faced and defeated Jim Martinez after going double-hill. Then, on the one-loss side, it was a fight to see who would make the finals. Jerry DeLeo slipped past Dave Faust, while Charles Benson did the same with Ron Gabia, both matches going double-hill. Next, in the quarterfinals, DeLeo seemed to catch a gear when he knocked out Benson 6-3, although the semifinals had him hopelessly in neutral as Martinez pounded him 6-0. In the finals it was a toss up to whoever could take advantage first, but with neither player able to find an edge the match crept towards the double-hill marker, where Ireland found a final surge to sweep the event. C T. D E . M A. M D . M E . N H . N J . N Y. O H . PA. R I . V T. by InsidePOOL Staff and Boonpasook before matching up with O’Hanlon for the hot seat, which she won with a 7-2 score. O’Hanlon was sent home with third place by Steinman, earning her personal high tour finish and her first WPBA qualifier. The finals started out well for Pao, who jumped to a 4-1 lead, but Steinman came back to rally to lead 7-5 with three 9 ball breaks in a row. Keeping up the steam, she finished with a 9-6. Caroline Pao, room owner Bill Haley, Morgan Steinman by Rick Davis 1st Jim Ireland 2nd Jim Martinez 3rd Jerry DeLeo 1st Morgan Steinman 4th Kathy Friend 2nd Caroline Pao 5th Cyndi Haefner 3rd Sharon O’Hanlon Supadra Boonpasook 4th Charles Benson 5th Dave Faust Ron Gabia BROTHERS BAGS BARBOX EVENT SANZ UNDEFEATED AT SKYLINE BILLIARDS TIGER POOL TOUR / HAGERSTOWN, MD TRI-STATE TOUR / BROOKLYN, NY by Rick Davis took another four matches to reach Josh Brothers made an the quarterfinals, meeting Mike impressive comeback to own the Conway Jr. there after he eliminat38-player field at the Planet Pool ed Blickenstaff. With only a handful remainTour’s February 18 barbox competition. Taking place at ing, Brothers disposed of Conway Hagerstown Billiards in in the quarterfinals followed by Hagerstown, MD, the open, dou- Trainham in the semifinals. ble-elimination 9-ball event Holding the title in his sights, Brothers descended upon the offered something for everyone. Starting strong, Brothers waiting Healy and defeated him 7defeated one of the North’s heavy- 4 to claim top honors. weight players, Mike Davis, then barreled through three more rounds before catching the axe from Mitch Trainham. Along with Trainham, Joe Healy had his sights on the hot seat match, and after five straight wins they each found their way there. As the match completed, Healy chalked up his sixth win by sending Josh Brothers Trainham west. Over on the one-loss side, Matt Blickenstaff was trying to make a name for himself as he cut through six matches after taking an early loss to reach the top six. 1st Josh Brothers 4th Mike Conway Jr. 5th Matt Blickenstaff Slicing through the rest of the 2nd Joe Healy 3rd Mitch Trainham Matt Clatterbuck competition was Brothers, who 58 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 by Rick Davis Another offering from the Tri-State Tour during the February 24-25 weekend took place at Skyline Billiards in Brooklyn, NY, with a 29-player field ready for the double-elimination handicapped 9-ball event. Catching a gear early and refusing the slow down was Pablo Sanz, who skipped through the event undefeated for his first tour win of the season. On the winners’ side Sanz found himself facing Jorge Rodriguez in the hot seat match, and after a double-hill clash Sanz escaped to the finals. On the oneloss side it was a conglomeration of those scraping to be the other participant in the finals. Greg Hecht ousted Michael Harrington 6-5, while Hiram Maldonado sent Kevin Flynn packing from an 8-5 defeat. Hecht managed another victory against Maldonado, going 7-6, but was then stopped dead as Rodriguez stepped on him 7-4 on the way to a rematch against Sanz in the finals. With a sense of déjà vu Sanz and Rodriguez battled it out again, although the same result was destined to be as Sanz defeated Rodriguez a second time, this time 9-7, to claim the top spot in the event. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Pablo Sanz Jorge Rodriguez Greg Hecht Hiram Maldonado 5th Michael Harrington Kevein Flynn 7th Samson Kelly David Shlemperis 3/6/07 5:39 AM Page 59 NORTHEAST ARCHER DEFENDS TITLE AT TURNING STONE CLASSIC TURNING STONE CLASSIC VIII / VERONA, NY by Rick Davis D E . M A. M D . Johnny Archer M E . N H . N J . N Y. O H . John Morra 13th Chris Szuter Mika Immonen Randy Labonte Lyn Wechsler 17th Joe Tucker Mike Zuglan Erik Hjorliefson Richard Broumpton Walter Szydlowski Alan Duty Eddie Vasquez Dennis Hatch www.InsidePOOLmag.com 59 V T. Johnny Archer John Morra Jose Parica Joey Korsiak Steve Moore Santos Sambajon Jr. 7th Rodolfo Luat Warren Kiamco 9th Shawn Putnam Tony Crosby Jeff Kennedy Paul Song R I . 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th PA. Assembled at the Turning Stone Hotel and Casino in Verona, NY, a full 128-player field of the toughest competitors around, including top national and regional touring pros, came out to seek their share of the $25,000-added, $42,000 total prize fund. Through the onslaught of players many kept their eyes on defending champion Johnny Archer, who survived two days and five matches on the winners’ side then another five matches during the remainder of the event to reach the finals, where he nabbed the title by a whopping 134 margin from the then-undefeated John Morra. As the event began the winners’ side cannon fodder slowly folded to the crushing weight of the experienced pros, except for a scant few who would power their way past. Morra, a 17-year-old from Toronto, Canada, lit up the board with five wins, including a 9-3 defeat over Tony Crosby, to reach the top eight, while Santos Sambajon Jr. kept right beside him with five wins of his own, ending with a 9-6 win over Atlanta’s Steve Moore to propel him into the top eight. The other two winners’ side top eight included Joey Korsiak and Jose Parica. Along the way, Korsiak sent Dennis Hatch and Warren Kiamco west, while Parica bid farewell to Richard Broumpton, shutting him out 9-0, then slipped past defending champion Archer double-hill. With the event grinding along, a deck of pink slips were handed out to those who could not keep up with the string of matches. One of the first casualties among the top players was Robb Saez, who, after handing out a donut in his first match, lost the next two. A similar story unfolded for Thorsten Hohmann, who was sent to the left side of the chart 9-7 by Warren Kiamco in the opening round and found the door after only two more matches. Next to the door was a powerful trio of Northern players: Canadian Erik Hjorliefson, Dennis Hatch, and Mike Davis. Hjorliefson got slammed 9-4 by Archer, then Rodolfo Luat finished the job 9-7 in the next round. Davis, after taking a surprising firstround defeat, started to climb up the ladder, but Randy Labonte proved too much and showed him the door. Hatch had similar results, winning a two-pack of matches, taking a defeat from Korsiak 9-7, then winning another two-pack until getting the axe from Paul Song 9-6. A final group to just miss the top tier of the final day all found defeat from Luat who became the executioner for many. Mika Immonen, Gandy Valle and Tony Crosby all took their turn on Saturday to allow Luat to use them as stepping stones to the top eight. Finally, as the top eight stepped forward, only a handful of matches separated the players from their goal of the final match. The winners’ side breezed past as Morra dominated Sambajon 9-5 and Parica managed a rack better, defeating Korsiak 9-4. The hot seat match between Morra and Parica was a classic David and Goliath, with Morra the inexperienced young gun and Parica the tried and tested touring pro. Going double-hill, both players fought for every inch until Morra managed to take the match 9-8 to reach the finals. Meanwhile, chaos erupted on the one-loss side. Moore ground past Luat 9-6 only to fall to Korsiak by the same margin for a very respectable fifth-place finish. Nearby, Archer drilled Sambajon 9-2 then, with his sights on Korsiak, eliminated him as well by a 9-5 margin. As only three players remained, Archer relied on his firm footing to hold off Parica 9-6 to reach the finals. After four days of play the finals pitted defending champion Archer against an improbable pick—the young gun, Morra—in an extended race to 13. With a quick start it was clear a one-sided match was at hand, as Archer dominated the whole way. After the smoke cleared Archer had blown through 13-4 to make a repeat win at the Turning Stone Classic. C T. ARDS 54-April-2007 54-April-2007 3/12/07 1:14 PM Page 60 C T. D E . M A . M D . M E . N H . N J . N Y. O H . PA . R I . V T. NORTHEAST UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS NORTHEAST Date Tournament Venue City, ST Contact $ Added Eligibility 3/31-4-1 Joss Northeast 9-Ball Tour Ball Busters Billiards Binghampton, NY 607-724-9861 $1,500 Open 3/31-4-1 Tiger Pool Tour Bill & Billies Cuesport Arnold, MD 410-544-8185 $2,000 Open 4/1 Blaze 9-Ball Tour Drexeline Billiards Drexel Hill, PA 610-259-9144 $1,000 Open 4/8 New England 9-Ball Series Rhode Island Billiards North Providence, RI 401-323-1331 $500 Open 4/14-15 Joss Northeast 9-Ball Tour Golden Cue Billiards Albany, NY 518-459-9442 $3,000 Open 4/14-16 J. Pechauer NorthEast Women’s Tour Prime Time Billiards Sayreville, NJ 732-721-6555 $1,000 + qual.Ladies 4/15 Rockaway Billiards Rockaway, NJ 973-625-5777 $1,000 Open 4/21-22 Tiger Pool Tour Hagerstown Billiards Hagerstown, MD 301-791-1355 $2,000 Open 4/22 New England 9-Ball Series Country Club USA Chelmsford, MA 978-934-9700 $1,000 Open 4/22 Blaze 9-Ball Tour Raxx Pool Room, Bar & Grill W. Hempstead, NY 516-538-9896 $1,500 Open 4/28-29 Joss Northeast 9-Ball Tour Comet Billiards Parsippany, NJ 973-334-7429 $2,000 Open 4/29 Blaze 9-Ball Tour Comet Billiards Parsippany, NJ 973-334-7429 $1,000 Open 5/3-6 New England 9-Ball Series Spot Shot Billiards Portland, ME 207-773-3466 $10,000 Open 5/5-6 Tiger Pool Tour First Break Café Sterling, VA 703-444-2551 $1,500 Open 5/6 Blaze 9-Ball Tour Sharky’s Billiards Edison, NJ 732-632-9277 $1,500 Open 5/20 Blaze 9-Ball Tour Atlantic City Billiard Club Egg Harbor, NJ 609-645-7576 $1,000 Open Blaze 9-Ball Tour 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:52 AM Page 61 A L . F L . GA. K Y. M S . NC . S C . T N. VA. W V 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:53 AM Page 62 SCHAU AND LECAIN TAKE THE TITLES BERRONG BRINGS HIS BEST TO ATLANTA KBP 8-BALL AND 9-BALL TOURS / PALM HARBOR AND TAMPA, FL J. PECHAUER SOUTHEAST OPEN 9-BALL TOUR / ATLANTA, GA by Rick Davis The February 10-11 weekend brought a pair of events from KBP that were met with open arms from the players. The first event was 8-ball held at Strokers in Palm Harbor, FL, where Paul LeCain stormed through undefeated. The next day, 9-ball action took place at Planet 9-Ball in Tampa, FL, where Rich Schau emerged atop the field after a late defeat to own the event. Saturday’s 8-ball action was fast and furious as LeCain and Chris Walsh blitzed the board to reach the hot seat match. Neither of the players gave up more than two racks in the race-to-5 format until LeCain defeated Walsh 5-3 to claim king of the hill. On the one-loss side, 14-year-old Taz Naravan was mounting a comeback after an early loss to LeCain. Naravan bested the remainder of the one-loss board in order to meet Walsh. After a quick race-to-3 scuffle, Walsh slipped by double-hill to see the finals. Again, Walsh made things tough for LeCain taking the match double-hill, but in the end LeCain was crowned the champion. The next day 9-ball action got underway across town with a 27-player field. On the winners’ side the show belonged to Schau as he came off a first-round bye to light up the board and reach the hot seat match. Meeting him there was Jose Ybarra, who obliterated several opponents, including a 7-2 slap against tour heavyweight Josh Lewis, on his way to the hot seat match. Fighting for king of the hill, Ybarra slipped past Schau for a well-deserved rest. On the one-loss side, two players were fighting for a comeback. After a second-round loss, Wesley Whitfield took five matches to reach the quarterfinals and only gave up a single rack in three of the matches. Nearby, Lewis’ comeback also included five straight wins, although he handed out two shut-outs along the way. With the quarterfinals on hand, Lewis was in control and after he handed out his third shutout against Whitfield, he was on his way to the semifinals. Schau had his sights on Lewis and as the match reached double-hill the coin toss favored Schau who slipped past 5-4. That brought Schau to the finals for a rematch against Ybarra, and this time he was ready. The race-to-9 was no trouble for Schau, and in no time he had defeated Ybarra 9-5 to take the top spot. 1st Paul LeCain 2nd Chris Walsh 3rd Taz Naravan 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Rich Schau Jose Ybarra Josh Lewis Wesley Whitfield 62 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 by InsidePOOL Staff A field of 51 pool players converged upon Mr. Cues II in Atlanta, GA, the weekend of February 10-11 for the J. Pechauer Southeast Open 9-Ball Tour. The love of the sport in the South was evident, as Bruce Berrong triumphed to take top honors over Doug Young. It was an incredibly strong field, with players like Cliff Joyner and WPBA pro Sarah Rousey only ending up in a seventh-place tie. Berrong ended up in the west side of the chart, defeating young gun Jason Klatt 9-7 in the quarterfinals. There he met Travis Dorn, who had just been bested by Young 9-2 in the hot seat match. Dorn put up a good fight in the semifinals, but he fell 9-6 to the unstoppable Berrong. The final match between Berrong and Young was fairly onesided, as Berrong swept his opponent aside with an 11-4 definitive score. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th Bruce Berrong Doug Young Travis Dorn Jason Klatt Steve Moore Jerry Grooms 7th Cliff Joyner Sarah Rousey 9th Tommy Kennedy David Shedden Aaron Frady Wade Crane CROSBY TAKES ANOTHER TITLE ANDY GRUBBS MEMORIAL TOURNAMENT / FORT WALTON BEACH, FL by Rick Davis Fighting through a stacked field of 103 players, Tony “The Sniper” Crosby went undefeated to claim the Andy Grubbs Memorial Tournament. Taking place at Starcade Billiards in Ft. Walton Beach, FL, the February 18 event drew in players and fans alike to show their respect for Grubbs, a former partner of the host room who suddenly passed away in 2003. On the winners’ side Crosby found his way to the hot seat match, where he faced friend Richard Broumpton. Both players are heavyweights in the Southeast, and their match-ups on the Florida Pro Tour always keep the railbirds on their toes. After a great match, Crosby, who recently signed with Stroke It billiard wear, sent Broumpton to the one-loss side. Dave Broxson, another Florida powerhouse, found himself facing Scotty Townsend on the west side after Crosby defeated him the round earlier. Townsend served up a final defeat for Broxson to reach the quarterfinals. Nearby, Josh Hilliard eliminated U.S. Open champion John Schmidt, then after a brief meeting with Townsend proceeded to the semifinals. Hilliard and Broumpton battled for the right to reach the finals, but Broumpton was eager for a rematch, and he made sure it would happen. After an intermission of a couple rounds, Crosby and Broumpton clashed again, although the result was the same as Crosby walked away with another win, this time to secure the title. Tony Crosby 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Tony Crosby 5th Dave Broxson Richard Broumpton John Schmidt Josh Hilliard 7th John Pinegar Scotty Townsend Luther Blades 54-April-2007 3/6/07 5:56 AM Page 63 SOUTHEAST A WIN FOR DAVIS SOUTHEAST GETS MORE MOORE MCDERMOTT ALL-AMERICAN TOUR / VIRGINIA BEACH, VA GREAT SOUTHERN 9-BALL TOUR / GREENVILLE, SC by InsidePOOL Staff A L . The McDermott All American Tour stopped at Smokie’s in Virginia Beach, VA. February 24, where Jack Davis triumphed over Bill Duggan in the finals. This event featured a $1,000added purse with 42 players and included a double-elimination 9-ball format on bar boxes. In the hot seat match, Duggan clipped Jack Davis 5-4. Earlier in the A-bracket semifinals, Duggan had outpointed Dave Perry 5-3, while Jack Davis knocked off Jerry Grant 5-2. In the B-side quarterfinals, Bill Mason ousted Jerry Grant 5-1, and Dave Perry knocked out Dan Losh 5-1. Perry ousted Mason 5-2 in the B-side semis but was then eliminated in the B-side finals by Jack Davis 5-4. Davis had to defeat Duggan two sets for the title, and he succeeded by the count of 5-0 and 5-4. F L . Steve Moore 5th Todd West T.F. Whittington 7th David Trest Eugene Browning 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Steve Moore Nick Varner Gabe Owen Larry Nevel 5th B. White Scott Rabon 7th Brian Capps Josh Roberts W V Josh Hillard Scotty Townsend BBQ Man Jack Karowski VA. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th T N. The J. Pechauer Custom Cues Southeast Open 9-Ball Tour pulled into Pockets Billiards in Dothan, AL, for their February 24-25 tour stop, their eighteenth of the season. The double-elimination 9-ball event was captured by Josh Hillard, who went undefeated to score the lion’s share of the $1,000-added prize fund. As the first day concluded, the highest-finishing lady and junior players were recognized, each taking away $50. That went to Vicky Rybik and Lisa Wilson, splitting the ladies’ prize, while Jared Stephens took the junior prize. On the winners’ side of the event Hillard and “BBQ Man,” a local player, each made their way to the hot seat match, although it was no contest as Hillard blitzed through for a 9-2 thrashing. Over on the one-loss side Scotty Townsend eliminated Jack Karowski in the quarterfinals 9-5 then toasted the “BBQ Man” 9-6 in the semifinals for another chance at Hillard. The rematch in the finals showcased both players’ skills, and although Townsend was the favorite with his hometown backing him up, Hillard was playing lights out as he cleared the match by a comfortable 11-6 margin for the victory. S C . by Rick Davis NC . J. PECHAUER SOUTHEAST OPEN 9-BALL TOUR / DOTHAN, AL M S . HILLARD UNDEFEATED IN SOUTHEAST K Y. Broxson Schmidt Pinegar Blades Bill Mason, Dave Perry, Jack Davis, Bill Duggan A full 64-player field assembled at Sporty’s in Greenville, SC, for the February 17-18 stop of the Great Southern 9-Ball Tour, where Atlanta’s Steve Moore powered his way back from the oneloss side to take another title in his usual dramatic fashion. The event included a great cross-section of top male pros, as well as WPBA stars and Hall of Famers. Early action saw Monica Webb defeat Earl “The Pearl” Strickland 9-5, and after Strickland lost his next match he was done for the weekend. His two-and-out showed just how deadly this tour could be. On the winners’ side everyone was scrambling through the gauntlet. Landon Shuffett, everyone’s favorite young gun, made his way through three rounds until a 9-0 drilling by Varner sent him west. Nearby was Gabe “The Babe” Owen, who found his way to the hot seat match to meet “The Kentucky Colonel.” Once Varner powered his way past Owen 9-3, all eyes looked to Varner as the favorite. No one on the one-loss side was ready to be counted out yet; however, the sheer level of talent on the board made every win incredible. Leading the board was Moore, recent winner of the Derby City Classic 9-ball banks division, and while he is always a threat anywhere he goes, a long road awaited on the west side. Moore faced and eliminated Jason Klatt, an adversary from the Florida Pro Tour, 7-5. Another pair of wins, including a 7-1 slap to Scott Rabon, and Moore found his way to the quarterfinals. Josh Roberts chipped away a pair of opponents before falling to Larry “The Truth” Nevel, who had eliminated Shuffett 7-3 in the previous round, along with top WPBA pro Helena Thornfeldt, the round before that. Nevel handed out a doughnut to B. White by virtue of a crushing 7-0 match to face Moore. Things moved into high gear from there as Moore glided past Nevel 7-4 and then, to the shock of those in attendance, shut out former U.S. Open champion Owen 7-0 to reach the finals. With the true double-elimination format, everyone seemed to think Varner the favorite because of the odds alone, but once Moore took the first set 9-3, it was anyone’s game. With a final race to 7, Moore cocked his game up yet another notch, giving up only two racks as he torched Varner again—this time 7-2—to capture the event. GA. FL Jack Davis Bill Duggan Dave Perry Bill Mason Jerry Grant Dan Losh 7th Richie Price Tom Bellamy 9th Cheryl Pritchard Patrick Gasser LeRoy Bailey Connie Eddins by Rick Davis 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:00 AM Page 64 SOUTHEAST SCHAU TAKES SECOND STRAIGHT WIN; LANTZ UNDEFEATED A L . F L . GA. K Y. M S . NC . S C . T N. VA. W V KBP 9-BALL TOUR / HOLIDAY, FL by Rick Davis The February 24-25 weekend brought a full crowd to Hammerhead Billiards in Holiday, FL, for the latest offering of the KBP Billiard Tours. In the open division Rich Schau repeat his performance from the last stop, going undefeated, while in the ladies’ division Stacy Lantz dominated in the same fashion. The open division brought out a 44-player field, which was owned by Schau and Doug Cruz, each making their way to the hot seat match by virtue of an opening-round bye followed by four match wins. In the hot seat match Schau was again able to find the edge and slip past with a 7-5 win. On the one-loss side Dan Lavoie torched Florida Pro Tour regular Jason Richko 5-2, while Billy Moses eliminated Louis Altes by the same margin. Next, in the quarterfinals, it was Moses again, this time knocking out Lavoie 5-4 and then following it up by sending Cruz home with the familiar 5-4 finish. In the finals one race to 9 decided it all, and with neither player giving up any ground, the match found its way to double-hill, where Schau made a final surge to claim his second consecutive title. In the ladies’ division 11 players entered, although it was Lantz who controlled from the start. Participating in one of only two matches not to get a first-round bye, Lantz stumbled at first, winning her first match 7-6, but then she caught a gear and went 7-0 and 7-1 to reach Stephanie Mitchell in the hot seat match. Mitchell, always dangerous on tour, also survived a no-bye run by going 7-3, 7-1, and 7-1 to reach Lantz. It seemed that Mitchell was not told the match had begun, and before long Lantz had taken it 7-0. On the one-loss side Deanna Frost met Mitchell in the semifinals, and after making short work of her, she went on to face Lantz in the finals. The final match wavered back and forth at first until once again Lantz was able to take control and win the match 9-5. 1st Rich Schau 2nd Billy Moses 3rd Doug Cruz 4th Dan Lavoie 5th Louis Altes Jason Richko 1st Stacy Lantz 2nd Deanna Frost 3rd Stephanie Mitchell DAVIS COMES BACK TO WIN IN CAROLINA JACOBY CUSTOM CUES CAROLINA TOUR / ROCKY MOUNT, NC by Rock City Promotions Mike Davis was on the verge of defeat in the final match of the Jacoby Custom Cues Carolina Tour stop February 10 at Sharks-NShooters in Rocky Mount, NC. Down 7-2 in a single race to 9, Davis stormed back against local favorite Larry Pittman with the quiet, calm demeanor for which he is known. After Davis won 6 games in a row to take the hill, Pittman managed to win one more game but couldn’t put it away. Pittman earned his way into the championship match by handily defeating Ty Bissett 7-1, Ben Manning 7-1, and Tony Davis 70. The hot seat match proved to be a close one, however, as local sparring partner Phillip Richardson took Pittman to the hill before losing 7-6. Davis , meanwhile, defeated Joe Macon 7-0 and Mike Frowein 7-4 but was sent to the one-loss side by Richardson 7-4. After wins over Bissett 7-3 and T. J. Moore 7-0, Davis avenged his previous loss by defeating Richardson 7-1. The crowd at Sharks-N-Shooters enjoyed a great final match between Pittman and Davis. Pittman jumped out to a 7-2 lead, thanks to four break and run-outs. With ball in hand in the tenth rack, Pittman failed to run out, giving Davis a third game. Davis made three balls on the next break and shot safe. After Pittman scratched, Davis took ball in hand and ran out. Gaining momentum, Davis broke and ran the twelfth rack, making the score 7-5. He came up empty on the next break, and it looked like Pittman was finally getting his opportunity. But a failed safe gave Davis control of the table once again, and he ran out and then won the next rack to tie the score at 7-all. A break and run in the fifteenth rack put Davis on the hill, but he scratched on the 1 ball in the next rack, making it a hill-hill match. Pittman made two balls on the break and was forced to shoot safe. Davis played defense back and was rewarded with ball in hand to clear the final rack. 64 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Tournament director Doug Ennis, Mike Davis, Larry Pittman, room owner James Gray 1st Mike Davis 3rd Phillip Richardson 2nd Larry Pittman 4th T. J. Moore 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:02 AM Page 65 SOUTHEAST UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS SOUTHEAST $ Added $500 Eligibility Amateurs 4/14 KBP Lucasi Ladies’ 9-Ball Tour Hammer Heads Holiday, FL 727-934-9494 $300 Amateur ladies 4/14-15 Viking Cue Open 9-Ball Tour The Pool Room Marietta, GA 770-579-3388 $1,000 Open 4/15 Viking Cue Amateur 9-Ball Tour The Pool Room Marietta, GA 770-579-3388 $500 Amateurs 4/15 Viking Cue Juniors 9-Ball Tour The Pool Room Marietta, GA 770-579-3388 Nat’l qual. Juniors 4/15 KBP Lucasi Amateur 9-Ball Tour Hammer Heads Holiday, FL 727-934-9494 $500 Amateurs 4/21-22 Viking Cue Open 9-Ball Tour Sporty’s Greenville, SC 864-297-6500 $1,000 Open 4/22 Viking Cue Amateur 9-Ball Tour Sporty’s Greenville, SC 864-297-6500 $500 Amateurs 4/28 KBP Lucasi Amateur 8-Ball Tour Strokers Billiards Palm Harbor, FL 727-786-6683 $300 Amateurs 4/28-29 Viking Cue Open 9-Ball Tour Play 2 Win Billiards Raleigh, NC 919-662-3888 $1,000 Open 4/28-29 McDermott All-American Tour Flipper McCoy’s Norfolk, VA 757-855-2071 $1,500 Amateur men 4/28-29 McDermott All-American Tour Flipper McCoy’s Norfolk, VA 757-855-2071 $500 Amateur ladies 4/28-29 McDermott All-American Tour Chattanooga Billiard Club Chattanooga, TN 423-499-3883 $500 Amateurs 4/29 Viking Cue Amateur 9-Ball Tour Play 2 Win Billiards Raleigh, NC 919-662-3888 $500 Amateurs 4/29 Viking Cue Junior 9-Ball Tour Play 2 Win Billiards Raleigh, NC 919-662-3888 Nat’l qual. Juniors 4/29 KBP Lucasi Amateur 9-Ball Tour Planet 9 Ball Tampa, FL 813-818-7665 $500 Amateurs 5/5 Jacoby Custom Cues Carolina Tour Dot’s Cue Club Rocky Mount, NC 252-972-9220 $1,000 Open S C . GIVE YOUR CUES SOMETHING TO BRAG ABOUT WHILE ON THE FELT. NC . CHECK OUT THE THREADS. M S . Contact 352-688-9965 K Y. City, ST Spring Hill, FL GA. Venue Capone’s Billiards F L . Tournament KBP Lucasi Amateur 9-Ball Tour A L . Date 4/1 T N. VA. W V Creative Inventions 9142-44 Jordan Ave Chatsworth, CA 91311 Toll-free (800) 388-5132 www.porper.com www.InsidePOOLmag.com 65 3/6/07 6:03 AM Page 66 RYSER RISES ABOVE THE REST SMITH SWEEPS AURORA STOP MCDERMOTT ALL-AMERICAN TOUR / STERLING, IL MCDERMOTT ALL-AMERICAN TOUR / AURORA, IL. by InsidePOOL Staff The McDermott All-American Tour’s 20th stop brought out 51 players to Leisure Time Billiards in Sterling, IL. Held Saturday, February 3, this stop featured a $500-added purse, of which the lion’s share went to Fred Ryser, who went undefeated to take first place. In the double-elimination 8-ball format, Ryser clipped Shawn Carlson 4-3 in the hot seat match after earlier having slipped by Tony Morales 4-3. Over on the B side, Morales then ousted Anthony Garcia and then in turn was eliminated by Carlson 4-2 in the semifinal match. Ryser continued his winning ways in the finals to defeat Carlson 4-2 for the title. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Fred Ryser Shawn Carlson Tony Morales Anthony Garcia by InsidePOOL Staff The twenty-first stop of the 2006/2007 McDermott All American Tour featured a $500-added purse with 33 players and was hosted by Rudy’s Place in Aurora, IL. Held February 10, this event included a double-elimination 8-ball format on bar boxes, in which John Smith ran undefeated to the finals. In the hot seat match, Smith sprinted past Bob Romano 52. Earlier in the A bracket semifinals, Smith had out-pointed Chad Hefke 5-2, while Romano knocked off Mark Rudolph 53. In the B-side, Mark Rudolph clipped Rich Mager 5-4, and Chad Hefke knocked out Ben Garcia 5-1. Hefke then ousted Rudolph 5-1 and continued on in the B side finals to eliminate Romano 5-4. Smith continued his dominance in the tourney finals, defeating Hefke 5-1 for the title. 5th Larry Sneath Chad Elston 7th Carlos McGill Kim Stigall CARDENAS EARNS TOP SENIOR TITLE FRIENDSWOOD SENIOR 9-BALL TOURNAMENT / WEBSTER, TX by InsidePOOL Staff Breakers Billiards in Webster, TX, was the site of the Second Annual Friendswood Senior 9-Ball Tournament February 24. Event promoter and director Bill Tippit filled the invitational event with 32 top seniors 55 and older who represented more than a dozen communities in the Houston-Galveston Bay Area. As the competitors assembled for the players’ meeting, there was no shortage of geriatric jokes. But as the meeting concluded and tournament time approached, the expressions on the 32 faces changed from humor to determination. Eight hours later, the championship match evolved into a duel between David Cardenas and Gary Tavener. Cardenas, considered one of the Bay Area’s stronger players, was required to give his opponents the wild 8 throughout the tournament. Tavener, from Houston’s far southwest side, was considered something of a dark horse. They met for the first time on the winners’ side, and Tavener sent Cardenas to the one-loss side 7-4. The true double-elimination finals proved to be a classic match-up. Tied at 6 in the race to 7, Cardenas had the final break of the set. The cue ball crashed into the rack and balls scattered. Almost as an afterthought, the 9 ball slowly rolled toward the corner pocket, and then dropped. The crowd let out a whoop, and both players shook their heads. Riding his momentum, Cardenas broke to a quick lead in the final set and then held on and allowed Tavener to get only one game in the final set. A R . I A. I L . KS . L A. M I . M N. M O . N D . N E . O K . S D . T X . W I . 54-April-2007 1st 2nd 3rd 4th David Cardenas, promoter/director Bill Tippit, Gary Tavener 66 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 David Cardenas Gary Tavener Wayne Sandlin Tom O’Neil John Smith, room owner Miguel Terrazas, Chad Hefke 1st 2nd 3rd 4th John Smith Chad Hefke Bob Romano Mark Rudolph 5th Rich Mager Ben Garcia 7th Angel Reyes Keith Helfrich HELFRICH OVERCOMES WEATHER TO TAKE A WIN MCDERMOTT ALL-AMERICAN TOUR / CLINTON, IA by InsidePOOL Staff Despite some horrid weather, the McDermott All American Tour’s February 24 stop attracted 39 players. Hosted by Lassiters Billiards in Clinton, IA, this event featured a $500-added purse, the lion’s share of which went to eventual winner Keith Helfrich. The event included a double-elimination 8-ball format on bar boxes, and Mike Rohner ran undefeated to the finals. In the hot seat match, Rohner handled Mike Herrera 4-1. Earlier in the Abracket semifinals, Rohner had outpointed Shane Johnson 4-3, while Herrera knocked off Jesse Bowman 4-1. In the B-side quarterfinals, Keith Helfrich ousted Bowman 5-3, and Johnson knocked out Jeff Clark 5-3. Helfrich then ousted Johnson 5-1 in the B-side semis and continued his hot streak, eclipsing Mike Herrera 5-0 in the B-side finals. Helfrich had to defeat Mike Rohner two sets for the title, and he succeeded by the count of 5-3 and 5-1. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Keith Helfrich Mike Rohner Mike Herrera Shane Johnson 5th Jesse Bowman Jeff Clark 7th Don Sager Phil Fulsang 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:06 AM Page 67 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:09 AM Page 68 CENTRAL Venue City, ST Contact $ Added Eligibility W I . 4/1 KBP Lucasi Amateur 9-Ball Tour Capone’s Billiards Spring Hill, FL 352-688-9965 $500 Amateurs 4/14 KBP Lucasi Ladies’ 9-Ball Tour Hammer Heads Holiday, FL 727-934-9494 $300 Amateur ladies 4/14-15 Viking Cue Open 9-Ball Tour The Pool Room Marietta, GA 770-579-3388 $1,000 Open T X . 4/15 Viking Cue Amateur 9-Ball Tour The Pool Room Marietta, GA 770-579-3388 $500 Amateurs 4/15 Viking Cue Juniors 9-Ball Tour The Pool Room Marietta, GA 770-579-3388 Nat’l qual. Juniors 4/15 KBP Lucasi Amateur 9-Ball Tour Hammer Heads Holiday, FL 727-934-9494 $500 Amateurs 4/21-22 Viking Cue Open 9-Ball Tour Sporty’s Greenville, SC 864-297-6500 $1,000 Open 4/22 Viking Cue Amateur 9-Ball Tour Sporty’s Greenville, SC 864-297-6500 $500 Amateurs O K . 4/28 KBP Lucasi Amateur 8-Ball Tour Strokers Billiards Palm Harbor, FL 727-786-6683 $300 Amateurs 4/28-29 Viking Cue Open 9-Ball Tour Play 2 Win Billiards Raleigh, NC 919-662-3888 $1,000 Open 4/28-29 McDermott All-American Tour Flipper McCoy’s Norfolk, VA 757-855-2071 $1,500 Amateur men 4/28-29 McDermott All-American Tour Flipper McCoy’s Norfolk, VA 757-855-2071 $500 Amateur ladies 4/28-29 McDermott All-American Tour Chattanooga Billiard Club Chattanooga, TN 423-499-3883 $500 Amateurs 4/29 Viking Cue Amateur 9-Ball Tour Play 2 Win Billiards Raleigh, NC 919-662-3888 $500 Amateurs 4/29 Viking Cue Junior 9-Ball Tour Play 2 Win Billiards Raleigh, NC 919-662-3888 Nat’l qual. Juniors 4/29 KBP Lucasi Amateur 9-Ball Tour Planet 9 Ball Tampa, FL 813-818-7665 $500 Amateurs 5/5 Jacoby Custom Cues Carolina Tour Dot’s Cue Club Rocky Mount, NC 252-972-9220 $1,000 Open A R . I A. I L . KS . L A. M I . M N. M O . N D . S D . Tournament N E . UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS CENTRAL Date 68 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:11 AM Page 69 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:14 AM Page 70 Venue Normandie Casino City, ST Gardena, CA Contact 602-653-9974 $ Added $20,000 Eligibility Pros 3/31-4-1 McDermott All-American Tour Main Street Billiards Tucson, AZ 520-546-3464 $1,500 Amateurs 4/28-29 Arizona Women’s Billiard Tour Northern Lounge Glendale, AZ 480-272-2016 $500 + qual.Ladies 5/5-6 McDermott All-American Tour Antique Billiards Museum Colorado Springs, CO 719-597-9809 $1,000 Amateurs 5/9-18 BCA National 8-Ball Championships Riviera Hotel & Casino Las Vegas, NV 702-719-7665 N/A Members 6/7-16 ACS National Championships Riviera Hotel & Casino Las Vegas, NV 888-662-1705 N/A Members 6/9-10 Arizona Women’s Billiard Tour On The Snap Prescott, AZ 480-272-2016 $500 + qual.Ladies 7/14-15 Arizona Women’s Billiard Tour Sixshooters Peoria, AZ 480-272-2016 $500 + qual.Ladies 8/18-19 Arizona Women’s Billiard Tour Pockets Tucson, AZ 480-272-2016 $500 + qual.Ladies 10/13-14 Arizona Women’s Billiard Tour Alexander’s Bar and Grill Phoenix, AZ 480-272-2016 $500 + qual.Ladies 11/17-18 Arizona Women’s Billiard Tour Metro Sportz Bar Phoenix, AZ 480-272-2016 $500 + qual. 12/15-16 Arizona Women’s Billiard Tour Sixshooters Peoria, AZ 480-272-2016 $500 + qual.Ladies N M . N V. O R . U T. WA. W Y. UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS WESTERN Date Tournament 3/28-4-1 U.S. Pro Tour Championship Ladies CO . H I . I D . M T. InsidePOOL CA. POOL WEBSITE. POOL MAGA ZINE. A Z . WAY TO GET INSIDE . So why would you want to go anywhere else? A K . InsidePOOL Magazine, the number one billiards magazine for the best price: 10 issues for $19.99. That is all the lastest pool news, professional instruction by some of your favorite players, extraordinary writing, and comprehensive coverage for less than $2 an issue. Take your best shot, you won’t find anything better! Call (866) 961-7665 ext. 223 or 224 for your subscription. Mail check or money order to PO Box 972 , Kittanning, PA 16201 # InsidePOOL Magazine 70 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 InsidePOOL.com get Inside. # # P 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:30 AM Page 71 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:31 AM Page 72 M STAN JA THE LION CONQUERS WATERLOO BACK-TO-BACK WINS FOR PAGULAYAN CANADIAN 30K TOUR / WATERLOO, ONT CANADIAN 30K TOUR / NEWMARKET, ONT R E P O RT 1st 2nd 3rd 4th WO R L D by Willy Hermoza and Tony Butera Bitter cold saw in the weekend of February 3-4, bringing 54 players to Pool Paradise in Waterloo for the month’s first Canadian 30K Tour stop. Given the strong field, it was no surprise that it took a former world champion, Alex Pagulayan, to win the event. On the A side of the chart, Pagulayan bested Leanne Amable 9-2 to reach the hot seat match against Scott Soroko, where he easily prevailed 10-3. Frequent tour winner Erik Hjorliefson ended up in fourth place at this event, getting ousted by John Morra 9-6 in the quarterfinals. Morra, who was sent to the B side earlier by Soroko, thus earned himself a rematch with that win but couldn’t capitalize, and Soroko bested Morra again 6-0. Now in the finals, it wasn’t long before Pagulayan unsheathed his claws and took the match 10-4. Alex Pagulayan 5th Leanne Amable Scott Soroko Adam Smith John Morra 7th Josh Rundle Erik Hjorliefson Marc Bucais by Willy Hermoza and Tony Butera Alex Pagulayan won his second Canadian 30K Tour stop in a row the weekend of February 10-11, defeating a tough, 64-person field. Players such as Chris Orme, Scott McDonald, and Rob Brandenburg tried to stop the former world champion from taking first for the second event in a row but could not prevail. Dunlop Billiards in Newmarket, ONT, was the host site, and the fans came out in droves for “The Lion.” To reach the hot seat match, Pagulayan fought off Brian McDougall 9-5 to match up with Mike Roberts. A convincing 10-5 sent Roberts to the oneloss side. In the quarterfinals, Dennis Rhodes eked out a double-hill match over McDougall to face Roberts, who was relegated to fourth place when Rhodes scored another hill-hill match. Patiently waiting in the hot seat, Pagulayan made quick work of Rhodes, who was thrilled just to be playing the champ, and won the event with a 10-1 score. MASON MAKES IT IN SCARBOROUGH HJORLIEFSON UNSTOPPABLE IN OSHAWA CANADIAN 30K TOUR / SCARBOROUGH, ONT CANADIAN 30K TOUR / OSHAWA, ONT Alex Pagulayan, Scott Soroko by Willy Hermoza and Tony Butera The Canadian 30K Tour’s event at Shooters in Scarborough brought 42 fine players out to enjoy a weekend of 9-ball. Held February 24-25, this event saw a surprise in the finals when Terri Mason took first place over Chris Orme. On the right side of the chart, the hot seat match took place between Mason and Tony Lai, where Mason bested her opponent 6-2. Working their way through the left side, Orme ousted Mike Patrowicz 10-1 to meet and defeat Jason Klatt in the quarterfinals 9-7. After eliminating Lai in the semis 9-2, Orme moved on to the final match against the determined Mason. The match went hill-hill, but Mason prevailed to take first place, her best finish on the tour. 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th Terri Mason Chris Orme Tony Lai Jason Klatt Michael Orprecio Mike Patrowicz Terri Mason 72 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Alex Pagulayan Dennis Rhodes Mike Roberts Brian McDougall by Willy Hermoza and Tony Butera Tee’s and Cue’s in Oshawa, ONT, welcomed 33 players for the February 18 stop of the Canadian 30K Tour. Of the faithful members, which included Scott McDonald, Mario Morra, and Ron Ranalli, it was Erik “Big Red” Hjorliefson who triumphed yet again to take first place. With a 10-3 defeat of Marvin Catindig, Hjorliefson moved on to the hot seat match, where he met Mike Patrowicz. He commanded the match and 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th Erik Hjorliefson Marc Bucais Mike Patrowicz Mario Morra Marvin Catindig Alex Radomski 5th Mike Loponen Ryan Clements 7th Mike Leigh Chris Orme took a 10-4 victory to wait for his next opponent. Morra dealt a 9-0 wipeout to Catindig only to be sent home with fourth place courtesy of Marc Bucais. Now on a roll, Bucais eliminated Patrowicz 6-1 and takes the A train to meet Hjorliefson in the finals. Though the spunky youngster took the first set of the double-elimination finals 54, Hjorliefson fired right back in the second set with a stunning 9-0 victory. Erik Hjorliefson by Stan C B an all-s B compos B Pagulay Filipino Potier h expectin phone a C w H at this e is now P unusual H good da rolled R oppone m w stateme of the K m things b then ex w from 4M against usual lo to deter the fina against be goin ball. W balls an Potier. W T soon M 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:33 AM Page 73 World MONTAL MAKES IT TO THE TOP STAN JAMES CANADIAN 9-BALL TOUR / KELOWNA, BC the table and took the rack home to draw within one. He took the next rack as well, and the match was tied at nine games apiece with a maximum of only three games left to determine the winner. Potier’s break came up dry, but Montal scratched on the 2 ball, and Potier used the ball in hand opportunity to run out the rack and gain the hill. However, his next break also failed him, and Montal once again came to the table. This time it was Montal who took the reins and joined Potier on the hill with a 6-9 combination. Montal made the 5 ball on the break but missed the 1 ball in the side and brought Potier back to the table. Potier had no shot and tried to play safe but left the 1 ball available. Montal grabbed this lifeline and pulled himself home to take the title 11-10. WO R L D Edwin Montal R E P O RT by Stan James Staff The field at the February 17-18 stop of the Stan James Canadian 9-Ball Tour was perhaps the strongest to date. Held at Breakers Billiards and Bistro in Kelowna, BC, this event garnered an all-star cast of Canadian champions, including national champ Brady Gollan, Alex Pagulayan, and points leader Jeff Kennedy to compose the 68-player field. But strong resumes were proven worthless on Sunday, when Pagulayan could manage no better than fifth place, falling first to Filipino transplant Edwin Montal 9-7 and then to Paul Potier 9-3. Potier had a more interesting tournament than most: His wife was expecting their first child, Potier had to keep an ear out for the telephone as well as play his best game. Current Canadian National champ Gollan fared no better, tying with Pagulayan for fifth place after a hill-hill defeat by John Horsfall and then a 9-6 loss to Jeff Kennedy. By taking fourth place at this event, Kennedy maintained a strong tour points position and is now in second place behind winner Edwin Montal. Potier showed a lot of power in Kelowna, in spite of his unusual circumstances. After being sent to the one-loss side by Horsfall 9-6, he came in Sunday with a firm resolve and put in a good day’s work. He put down Mike Vidas 9-8 and then steamrolled Raymond Cruz 9-1 before ending Pagulayan’s road. His next opponent was Kennedy, and Potier put on another exhibition in that match, taking it home with a 9-2 scoreline. Horsfall, a former mainstay on the Canadian billiard scene who has been pursuing other interests of late, also made a fine statement this weekend. Drawn into one of the more difficult areas of the brackets, Horsfall took down, among others, Potier 9-4, Kennedy 9-7, and Gollan 9-8 before moving undefeated into his match with last year’s tour champion, Montal. It was then that things began to unravel for Horsfall. He lost hill-hill to Montal and then experienced the same fate, losing by one game, in his rematch with Potier in the semifinals in a match that saw Potier come back from 4-0 down to take the match 9-8. Montal, who had been pegged as the underdog in his match against Alex Pagulayan, never trailed in that match and took his usual low-key attitude into the arena for his match against Horsfall to determine who would occupy the hot seat and enjoy a ticket to the finals. His no-sweat attitude won the day in a marvelous match against Horsfall that came down to a single rack that appeared to be going the way of Horsfall until he became snookered on the 5 ball. When he missed the kick, Montal easily swept the remaining balls and rested as Horsfall prepared to take on the hot stick of Potier. When Potier won against Horsfall, the final was set. The finals, a race to 11 games, started off as a close match, but soon Montal began to edge ahead. At 9-7 Potier regained control of Paul Potier 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th Edwin Montal Paul Potier John Horsfall Jeff Kennedy Alex Pagulayan Brady Gollan 7th Raymond Cruz Dave Martin 9th Mike Vidas Craig Kerry Gary Hauck Roger Colbert UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS WORLD Date Tournament 4/14-15 Venue City, ST Contact $ Added Tiger Canadian Women’s Pool Tour Dunlop Billiards Barrie, ONT 705-721-0125 $1,000 + qual. Ladies 5/5-6 Tiger Canadian Women’s Pool Tour Pool Paradise Waterloo, ONT 519-884-4969 $500 Ladies 7/14-15 Tiger Canadian Women’s Pool Tour Bobby D’s Billiards & Grill Burlington, ONT 905-639-5550 $500 Ladies 8/11-12 Tiger Canadian Women’s Pool Tour Wooden Rack Mississauga, ONT 905-565-9137 $1,000 + qual. Ladies 9/15-16 Tiger Canadian Women’s Pool Tour Tony’s Place Guelph, ONT 519-824-3102 $500 10/13-14 Tiger Canadian Women’s Pool Tour Dakota Sports Club & Billiards Alliston, ONT N/A $1,000 + qual. Open 11/17-18 Tiger Canadian Women’s Pool Tour Dooly’s 519-885-1436 $1,000 Waterloo, ONT Eligibility Ladies Ladies www.InsidePOOLmag.com 73 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:34 AM Page 74 Rankings P RO F E S S I O NA L A N D A M AT E U R TO U R R A N K I NG S UNITED STATES PROFESSIONAL POOL PLAYERS ASSOCIATION Mika Immonen Johnny Archer Thorsten Hohmann Mike Davis Ralf Souquet Corey Deuel Shawn Putnam CharlieWilliams Troy Frank Robb Saez Rodney Morris Marcus Chamat Charles Bryant Jeremy Jones Gabe Owen WOMEN’S PROFESSIONAL BILLIARD ASSOCIATION 545 535 447 405 390 367 320 307 300 290 272 247 230 227 225 Allison Fisher Karen Corr Kelly Fisher Monica Webb Vivian Villareal Ga-Young Kim Gerda Hofstatter Xiaoting Pan Jeanette Lee Kim White Tiffany Nelson Helena Thornfeldt Melissa Herndon Jennifer Barretta Sarah Ellerby 41750 38750 34000 30250 30000 27950 27500 26750 25500 24000 24000 23500 22000 20600 20350 WORLD POOL-BILLIARD ASSOCIATION ARTISTIC POOL Mike Massey Nick Nikolaidis Tom Rossman Andy Segal Sebastian Giumelli Lucasz Szywala Bruce Barthelette Charles Darling 1155.7 798.55 774.76 539.27 504.34 434.59 422.04 391.12 TIGER TOUR OPEN DIVISION My-Hanh Lac Pamela Treadway Zinnie Panju Sueyen Rhee Kathleen Lawless Teresa Savage Gwen Dickert Kim Smith Dona Sellman Kathy Friend Malea Haacke Marcie Hanifee Jacquilyn Redmon Judie Wilson Kim Sudler Sharon O'Hanlon 74 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 Matt MacPhail Jamison Neu Mark Dimick Eric Yow Sal Conti Steve Geller Tom Kinzel David Nangle 305.89 285.84 272.42 218.6 200.05 97.98 92.4 89.38 TIGER TOUR WOMEN’S DIVISION 500 400 325 275 250 250 225 225 200 200 200 200 175 175 175 175 Shawn Putnam Danny Mulhollen III BJ Ussery Matt Krah Danny Green Richard Barney Alan Duty Shaun Wilkie Eric Moore Greg Sabins Justin Daniels Kevin West Bill Duggan Brad Grasso Brett Stottlemyer David Hunt 2260 1808 1469 1243 1130 1130 1017 1017 904 904 904 904 791 791 791 791 54-April-2007 3/6/07 10:50 AM Page 75 R E G I O NA L P L AY E R O F T H E M O N T H 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:46 AM Page 76 Joey Korsiak by Rick Davis “My goal in life is to win a championship,” said Joey Korsiak as his reason for his dedication to the game of billiards. Originally from Brooklyn, NY, Korsiak was an admirer of the game from a young age. Then, at 12 years old, a local poolroom began to pull in the best players of the time for a weekly event. This, explained Korsiak, “inspired me to get into the game more.” The combination of witnessing the highest skill level of the sport and seeing the riches the eventual winners took away open the young Korsiak’s eyes. Now, 27 years old and living in the Hamptons, he has used his previous titles as a stepping stone to where he is now. First winning the junior nationals in 1997, then his first Joss Northeast 9-Ball Tour stop win in 1999, Korsiak began to get closer to his goal. Now, with more than 10 Joss Tour wins, as well as a fifth-place finish at the Super Billiards Expo in 2005 and a fourth-place finish at the Turning Stone Classic VIII, Korsiak is ready to close in on his goal. Practicing 4-5 hours every day, including jumps, breaks, drills, and even watching himself on tape, he is constantly sharpening his game to reach his ultimate goal. Always ready for any event, all games are in his bag of tricks, although a recent return to playing one-pocket has captured his attention lately. Korsiak explained, “At first I didn’t have the patience for it, but I play chess a lot, and years later after going back and playing with someone who really knew the game, it’s now my favorite game to play. But I think I play every game pretty good.” On his quest for a major championship, a host of sponsors help keep his mind on the action. Mike Capone Cues and the Seminole Tribe of Florida constantly assist him while the crew at NYC Grind help keep him pointed in the right direction. While reaching for his goal, Korsiak plans to continue to be a threat in the Northeast as well as the major annual events like Valley Forge, the U.S. Open, and the Derby City Classic. Meanwhile, events from the Joss Tour help keep him sharp on his way to the top. t Cues / Gift Items Accessories / Hats T-Shirts / Jackets Denim / Polos Embroidery Call 800-627-8888 for a catalog OR SHOP ONLINE @ 4825 S. 16th St. Lincoln, NE 68512 Dept. IP w w w. p o o l n d a r t s . c o m 76 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 54-April-2007 3/8/07 3:52 PM Page 77 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:50 AM Page 78 78 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:51 AM Page 79 International Cuemakers Association “A commitment to Excellence” www.internationalcuemakers.com www.norwelacues.com NORWELA CUES PRATHER CUE PARTS “As Always” ALL Components for complete Cue Building. VISA, M/C, Amex, Discover, and PayPal 1-800-364-6913 200 South Main Steeet Mooreland, OK. 73852 www.prathercue.com, sales@prathercue.com Call For our Free Component and Cue Catalog Jacoby Custom Cues www.jacobycue.com 715.886.2900 316.269.3844 www.shurtzcue.com SHURTZ CUSTOM CUES www.cameroncues.com CAMERON CUSTOM CUES http://www.queperfect.biz 888.843.1283 www.schulercue.com www.hightowercues.com www.daytoncues.com www.unclewaldosbilliards.com www.nitticues.com www.cuesbyDaveSucher.com WORLD’S GREATEST CUE EXTENSION THE Q EFREN REYES CHOSE HIGHTOWER CUSTOM CUES Waldo's Cue Repair 386-760-7006 CUES BY DAVE SUCHER SCHULER CUES DAYTON CUES NITTI CUES For Sale 6 Brunswick Gold Crown III 41/2 x 9 with Ball Return $2500.00 each Buy all 6 for $12,000 Call Bill at 419.841.2596 Toledo, Ohio www.thetonyryan.com www.marksmithcues.com MARK SMITH CUSTOM CUES 850.562.0037 TRIPLE CROSS CUES Your Classified Here 1.866.961.7665 extension 226 www.cuemaker.com DIECKMAN, CUE BUILDER CUE LATHES & INLAY MACHINES Starting at $850. Also sold separately: 2 HR Cue Repair and Building Video - $50, Point and Inlay Video - $50, Cue Building book $69.95, lathe pins, concaved live centers, chucks, wrap motors, and other parts to convert your lathe for cue making or repair. Tapered Shaft and Butt Blanks WWW.CUESMITH.COM Phone (770) 684-7004 Ask for Chris or write: “Cue Man Billiards” 444 Flint Hill Rd. Aragon, GA 30104 Wanted: Complete pool hall, lamps, sticks, balls, racks, kitchen, carpet everything. Also any leads on bowling lanes. Ready to move. WILL PAY CASH. No need to deal. Need up to 34 tables. Call 310.245.6785 www.InsidePOOLmag.com 79 F Entries can be submitted in two ways. By mail, entries must be postmarked by April 23. E-mails through www.insidepoolmag.com must be submitted no later than midnight April 30. We will contact the winner by phone and announce it on our website. The winner receives a Viking cue with a retail value of $300-$400 and a one-year subscription to InsidePOOL Magazine. WIN A VIKING CUE! 54-April-2007 3/6/07 6:52 AM Page 80 LAST MONTH’S WINNER "Although Corey's body english didn't help make the shot, it did inadvertently bring a much-needed rain to the local farmers." Gary Katz of Long Grove, IL To enter the contest, log onto www.insidepoolmag.com. 80 InsidePOOL Magazine - April 2007 >> 0407_Cover 3/6/07 4:11 PM Page 3 It’s a whole new game International Billiard & Home Recreation Expo June 21-23, 2007 Sands Expo & Convention Center Las Vegas, Nevada If you are in the business of billiards – this is an event you can’t afford to miss. The International Billiard & Home Recreation Expo provides qualified billiard buyers and suppliers with three days of open floor time at the Sands Expo & Convention Center, June 21-23, 2007, in Las Vegas, as well as a full program of social and networking events. Hundreds of exhibitors will be on hand with product displays ranging from the “classics” such as billiard tables, cues, cases, cloth, slate, balls, chalk, racks, stands, lighting, instructional products, publications, accessories and league systems…to complimentary lines like furniture, bars, room décor, poker, game tables, video games, music systems, tanning beds, spas, apparel and novelty items. Retailers and room operators are coming to Las Vegas…make purchases… learn the environment…compare brands…meet the industry! It’s a whole new game. Join us and see what’s new at the 2007 International Billiard & Home Recreation Expo. For more information on exhibiting and attending contact Expo Management: WT Glasgow Inc. Phone: (708) 226-1300 Fax: (708) 226-1310 Email: expo@bca-pool.com Or visit: www.bcaexpo.com Sponsored by: Billiard Congress of America Phone: (719) 264-8300 Fax: (719) 264-0900 E-Mail: marketing@bca-pool.com Or Visit: www.bca-pool.com Register for your admission badge today on-line at www.bcaexpo.com 1206-C1-4 3/13/07 3:16 PM Page 4
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