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Is Pool Dead in the USA ?

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  • Is Pool Dead in the USA ?

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    probably been posted before, but I just ran accross this on my news feed...

    Sharks on the Endangered List

    By L. JON WERTHEIM

    Published: November 24, 2007

    WHILE there are, admittedly, figures more deserving of sympathy than unemployed pool players, the demise of the hustler is an occasion to be mourned. As recently as 10 years ago, it was possible for a pool player to earn a living hustling, provided he was armed with the requisite chops and disposition. Plenty of “roadmen” made plenty of money with scores at Chelsea Billiards in Manhattan or Mikey’s 24/7 in Oklahoma City or the Sports Palace in Columbia, S.C. Odds were good that there was at least one unsuspecting local in the joint with an inflated impression of his talent for pocketing balls, and thus a willingness to throw down “big timber” against the out-of-towner.

    Today, pool hustlers have joined American heavyweight boxing champs, complete-game pitchers, hockey goons and drug-free cyclists as relics in sports. Endearing bit players in the cast of American culture, hustlers have been written out of future episodes. “It used to be that you had to turn down action; then you had to look hard for action; and now there’s no action,” Bucky Bell, a Cincinnati-based pool wizard, lamented to me. “A lot of guys who play real good pool are having to look for real jobs.”

    The pool hustler wasn’t murdered by any single suspect, but the last man holding the knife was Kevin Trudeau, the bestselling author of the “Natural Cures” series who once served a prison term for felony larceny. Mr. Trudeau out-hustled the hustlers — and killed off a national archetype in the process.

    But even before Mr. Trudeau, hustling was on its deathbed. The Internet didn’t help. Time was, a player would score big in, say, Cheyenne, Wyo., and by the time word got out over the pool transom, the hustler was already in Lexington, Ky., or Laredo, Tex. But then came the popular online forum AZBilliards.com. Suddenly a player would score big and his exploits would be publicized by sunrise.

    The poker boom hurt too, siphoning the species who once hustled pool — young, competitive, predominantly white men with an incurable gambling jones — with guaranteed round-the-clock action and a reduced threat of getting jacked in the parking lot. Even $3-a-gallon gas prices exacted a price: why drive to Olathe, Kan., for a chance at winning $500 when it might cost $250 just to get there?

    Then came the International Pool Tour, Mr. Trudeau’s final squirt of embalming fluid. When he founded the professional pool tour in 2005, Mr. Trudeau vowed to turn eight-ball into a viable, big-league sport. Winners would take home $500,000 prizes; first-round losers were guaranteed $5,000.

    For pool players, accustomed to driving miles out of their way just to avoid paying bridge tolls, this was akin to raising the minimum wage by a factor of 10. Hustlers who had been traveling incognito for years came out of the woodwork to try to qualify for the tour. Joining meant that their cover would be blown, but the money was too good to pass up.

    The first three events were smashing successes. But in keeping with the circadian rhythms of pool, the boom times didn’t last. Last year, after a tournament in Reno, Nev., players were informed of an inconvenient detail: the tour couldn’t pay the prize money. Mr. Trudeau, once accessible and upbeat, was nowhere to be found.

    The tour eventually notified players that the debts would be paid in small, periodic installments. But to date the players have yet to be paid all of the money they are owed. There hasn’t been another International Pool Tour event since.

    Some players were so demoralized by Mr. Trudeau’s hustle that they quit the sport entirely. And the rest had become known quantities to avid amateur players. Unmasked by television and the Internet, these once-stealthy hustlers could no longer lure anyone into believing they were just passing through town, innocently looking to relax at the local poolroom.

    The death of hustling marks the end of a uniquely American pursuit. What’s a more vivid extension of the frontier mentality than a man, carrying only a wooden stick, slinking into town and making a buck? What’s a better example of self-sufficiency than caroming around the country and using superior skill, craft and wit to fleece the other guy? Who embodies Melville’s “Confidence Man” better than the suave and mysterious pool hustler?

    Pool hustlers are outlaws, but they are — or were — the kind of outlaws we root for, “honorable swindlers” who usually dripped with charisma and eccentricity. “You don’t make much money but you do get paid in stories,” Kid Delicious, the New Jersey hustler, told me. “And you don’t got to worry about the taxman getting his hand on them.”

    And hustling doesn’t merely involve the players at the table. There was a rogue’s gallery of “stakehorses” (financial backers), “sweaters on the rail” (side bettors) and “nits” (kibitzers). As the gambling spigot has been turned off, the local poolroom — once a civic institution — has almost vanished. The extinction of the pool hustler has bleached some color from the cultural landscape and dotted small-town America with yet another economic casualty.

    Look hard and there’s still action out there. Earlier this year, two players won a high-stakes six-player “ring game” in Mobile, Ala. In September in Sioux Falls, S.D., a hearing-impaired player, Shane Van Boening, beat Corey Deuel, a veteran shark from Ohio, in a $10,000 winner-take-all race to 100 games. The annual Derby City Classic in Louisville, Ky., still features late-night games with stakes that can exceed six figures.

    “But that’s just gambling,” Mr. Bell says wistfully. “Real hustling — driving to a pool room in another state, walking in, setting the trap, busting the local guy and then heading to a new town — is different. That’s what ain’t there any more.”

    L. Jon Wertheim, a senior writer at Sports Illustrated, is the author of “Running the Table: The Legend of Kid Delicious, the Last American Pool Hustler.”
    www.internationalcuemakers.com
    www.jimboarmy.com

  • #2
    Are you mourning the hustlers demise or glad to see the back of them?

    Think you also have to consider the heightened risks of hustling in America too, Pull the wool over a punters eyes nowadays and he's liable to pull a gun on you.

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    • #3
      didn't mind the hustlers...do mind the fact that one or more pool rooms seem to close up per week over here...

      I have to ride 31 miles (one way) to play in a pool league. the open/vacant buildings that would be suitable for a pool room have such sky high rents that nobody can afford them.

      we need a miracle, not a Kevin Trudeau promise, to revive pool over here. I'm 59 and don't have alot of pool years left; would like to enjoy pool for the rest of my days, but the driving distance will be 75 miles if the current place folds its tent.
      www.internationalcuemakers.com
      www.jimboarmy.com

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      • #4
        the days of sneaky petes long gone?

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        • #5
          Originally Posted by Unkle Jackie
          .... I'm 59 and don't have alot of pool years left; would like to enjoy pool for the rest of my days, but the driving distance will be 75 miles if the current place folds its tent.
          Bah! betchya got more pool years in you than you think. My dad is probably gonna have a second hip replacement soon he's 78 and it dont stop him doing a round trip of 60 miles to go match fishing 3 times a week in all weathers and when he gets there he usually helps the older blokes get their tackle to their pegs. Mind though, the week after his hip op last year he asked me to help carry his gear as his artheritus was playing up.

          Oh and me mums younger brother who is seventy still plays snooker every week and goes swimming twice a week too. Dunno how good a swimmer he is but for a bloke with only a thumb and two fingers on his bridging hand he aint a bad player at all.

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          • #6
            Nice post Unk!
            Friend of mine is talking about going to the States to try his luck against some of the locals. If he's does alright hopefully it pays for his flight. Maybe he shouldn't bother!
            I have been told though that if your English lots of locals are quite happy to through $20+ in and you can coin it in but you can't always trust tails like that.
            Funilly enough I was intoduced to Karl Boyes at the weekend. He played in the IPT and got to the semis of the World 9 ball the other week. He went to the US on his own money to play the qualifiers for the IPT.

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            • #7
              Come to think of it I went to America for a holiday in '91 and never saw a pool table in any bar.

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