Interesting...
"Too many people say that American games are "easy" when they're actually playing them very badly! Anyone who has tried playing straight pool will appreciate what it takes to run 400 balls like John Schmidt and others have."
Yeah but could John Schmidt or any other of the top pool players pot 400 balls on a snooker table? Ronnie, Higgins, Hendry, Selby etc have gone 400 - 500 points without reply, even though there opponent has left a tough white from a break off or a safety. I realise that's not the same as straight pool and yes there is skill in maintaining concentration for that amount of potting on any table, but the ball to pocket ratio is the key here IMO.
Thanks for the correction on the Mizerak match - I'll have to get my VHS copy out and brush up! Am I correct about him mis-counting on the 52 break??
"I think snooker players have the better end of it in making the switch because of their solid technique, and they can manage some wins in short races in nine ball if things go their way. However, if any top snooker player played a top pool pro a race to 100 in ten ball or similar, the chances of the match being competitive aren't great."
You may be correct here - Maybe Barry H will organise such an event one day as he now has a foot in both camps!
Don't think I'm writing off nine ball altogether, as has been stated earlier in this thread, Darren Appleton and some of the other English players are at it now presumably as there's more money in it than English 8 ball?
But for me playing American pool on an english table is more of a challenge: The lads I play pool with and myself played a competion that started with us playing 15 balls straight with a screw-in tip pub cue (our own cues were banned) - nobody had won it for months at a pound a go. I cleared em on my second attempt and won £400!! We then progressed this comp. to play nine ball in numerical order, again for a pound a go. Overall in 3 months we won £1200!!! Was a real blast
"Too many people say that American games are "easy" when they're actually playing them very badly! Anyone who has tried playing straight pool will appreciate what it takes to run 400 balls like John Schmidt and others have."
Yeah but could John Schmidt or any other of the top pool players pot 400 balls on a snooker table? Ronnie, Higgins, Hendry, Selby etc have gone 400 - 500 points without reply, even though there opponent has left a tough white from a break off or a safety. I realise that's not the same as straight pool and yes there is skill in maintaining concentration for that amount of potting on any table, but the ball to pocket ratio is the key here IMO.
Thanks for the correction on the Mizerak match - I'll have to get my VHS copy out and brush up! Am I correct about him mis-counting on the 52 break??
"I think snooker players have the better end of it in making the switch because of their solid technique, and they can manage some wins in short races in nine ball if things go their way. However, if any top snooker player played a top pool pro a race to 100 in ten ball or similar, the chances of the match being competitive aren't great."
You may be correct here - Maybe Barry H will organise such an event one day as he now has a foot in both camps!
Don't think I'm writing off nine ball altogether, as has been stated earlier in this thread, Darren Appleton and some of the other English players are at it now presumably as there's more money in it than English 8 ball?
But for me playing American pool on an english table is more of a challenge: The lads I play pool with and myself played a competion that started with us playing 15 balls straight with a screw-in tip pub cue (our own cues were banned) - nobody had won it for months at a pound a go. I cleared em on my second attempt and won £400!! We then progressed this comp. to play nine ball in numerical order, again for a pound a go. Overall in 3 months we won £1200!!! Was a real blast
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