gulfportdoc
Verified Member
Right you are. This might be the beginning of an uptable game.And Sylver is in no trouble at all
~Doc
Right you are. This might be the beginning of an uptable game.And Sylver is in no trouble at all
And Sylver is in no trouble at all
who do you think has the best of it should that happen here?
Personally, I hate up table games when so many balls remain, but attempting a risky shot that is not easy to execute in pursuit of a trap that might work, isn't worth the risk. Especially when other, easier options are available.
Tom
I have been thinking about this shot for two days. I know how aggressive Scott is and for him to pass up a shot for a safe tells me a lot. Like has been said before, the two railer on the nine, bringing the cue ball back down the to the lower pocket requires more than I am able to do with consistency. Not that I haven't shot it a thousand times with that get a ball on your side mentality. I could probably count the number of times it worked out on one hand.
And Mitch, this is something you should think about, I saw the two railer right off, you did too. Too those who say that Scott missed seeing it, no.
I watched Scott giving Sylver 9/8 a few years ago and not liking any of it. Sylver is very underrated and can play some one pocket. I haven't seen him much on the tournament trail and have not seen him in any action lately? Anyone know what is up with the Sylver Man?
I watched Scott giving Sylver 9/8 a few years ago and not liking any of it. Sylver is very underrated and can play some one pocket. I haven't seen him much on the tournament trail and have not seen him in any action lately? Anyone know what is up with the Sylver Man?
I love that kid Sylver. He came in and gave One Pocket Rich a ball on Rich's table. Sylver kept losing but he kept smiling and drinking and having a good time. Treated everyone like they were old friends. He showed a lot of heart. I wish him all the best.
When someone has "one pocket" as part of their nickname, that may deter me from playing them when I come in from out of town, playing on their home turf
This is true but it also shows that Rich has been around for a long time even though his young age.
He came up when everyone was still playing one shot push out 9 ball. So if you wanted to play Rich you had to play "that guy who plays one pocket". He was one of the first that would give Efren action in one pocket. He just wanted to learn everything about the game. Grew up in Connecticut playing guys like Johnny Vivas and all the old timers. IMO he still is one of the best movers there is in the game.
LOL, that's awesome...