Interesting
Billiard Trivia
1. Billiards evolved from a lawn game similar to croquet played
sometime during the 15th century in Northern Europe (probably in
France).
2. The term “poolroom” now means a place where
billiards is played, but in the 19th century a poolroom was a betting
parlor for horse racing. Pool Tables were installed so patrons could
pass the time between races. The game of billiards and the poolroom
became connected in the public’s mind. Today, the two terms are
used interchangeably.
3. Pool is one of the safest sports in the world.
4. Pro player and trick shot specialist Paul Gerni is nicknamed
the “Ambassador” and speaks six languages.
5. The dome on Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's home, conceals a
billiard room. In Jefferson's day, billiards was illegal in Virginia.
6. The term “scratch”, as applied to a pocketing of
the cue ball, was derived from the penalty assessed for such a foul.
In pool’s early days, the score was often kept on a chalkboard.
When a player pocketed the cue ball, his opponent “scratched”
a point off the shooter’s score.
7. There are 15 colored balls in billiards, 7 “solid”,
7 “striped” and the black 8-ball
8. According to research conducted a few years back, billiard
champions have the highest average age of any sport, 35.6 years.
9. Tom Cruise did his own trick billiard shots for the 1986
film, The Color of Money, except for one in which he had to jump two
balls to sink another. Director Martin Scorsese said he wanted to let
Cruise learn the shot, but it would have taken two extra days of
practice, which would have held up production and cost thousands of
dollars. The shot was instead performed by professional billiards
player Mike Sigel.
10. Billiards was the first sport to have a world championship
(1873).
11. Throughout history, billiards has bridged the gap between
the aristocracy and the masses. Both gentlemen and street toughs
played.
12. In 1586, the castle of Mary, Queen of Scots, was invaded and
captured. The Invaders made a note of forbidding her the use of her
Pool Tables. They then killed her, and used the covering of the table
to cover her body.
13. In 1765 A.D., the first billiard room was built in England.
Played there was One-Pocket, which was a table with one pocket and
four balls.
14. The first coin-operated Pool Tables was patented in 1903. The
cost of a game on the first pay-for-play table: one penny.
15. Before the invention of celluloid and other new-age plastics,
billiard balls were made out of ivory. The elephants can thank their
present existence on the invention of plastics. Because billiard
balls had to be cut from the dead center of a tusk, the average tusk
yielded only 3 to 4 balls.
16. Captain Mingaud, the inventor of the leather cue tip, was
imprisoned for political reasons during the French Revolution. With
the help of a fellow prisoner, he was able to have a Pool Tables
installed in his cell. It was during his incarceration that be became
obsessed with the game, that he devised and perfected his invention.
His obsession became so intense, that at the end of his prison term,
he actually asked for a longer sentence so that he could complete his
study of the game.
17. The world’s largest billiard hall was built during
billiards’ “Golden Age”. “The Recreation”,
a mammoth seven-story health spa, was a bustling Detroit business in
the 1920’s. It featured 103 tables, 88 bowling lanes, 20 barber
chairs, three manicuring stands, 14 cigar stands, a lunch counter on
each floor, a restaurant that could seat 300, and an exhibition room
with theater seating, that could accommodate 250 spectators.
18. Charles Goodyear – the inventor of vulcanized rubber,
which revolutionized billiard cushions and countless other industries
– died a virtual pauper. His company failed, he was imprisoned
for debt, and he profited little from his breakthrough invention.
19. The Hustler was based on a novel by Walter Tevis. The novel,
however, was based on a short story he had earlier submitted to
Playboy. Before “The Hustler” was released, the “Philco
TV Theater” aired an episode called “Goodbye, Johnny”,
which bore an uncanny resemblance to the Playboy short story. In it,
Cliff Robertson portrayed the cocky young hustler, making Robertson –
not Newman – the original “Fast Eddie” Felson.
20. Marquetry – the art of making pictures or designs with
thin slices of wood, shell or other materials – has long
enhanced the beauty of tables and cues. The art form is hardly a
recent development. It has been practiced in Egypt and the Orient for
more than 3,000 years.
21. Many handicapped people have played the game of pool, but the
story of “Handless George” Sutton is truly one of
inspiration. Born in 1870, Sutton lost both hands in a sawmill
accident at the tender age of eight. Despite his handicap (and long
before the days of advanced prosthetics), he studied medicine and
graduated from the University of Milwaukee. During his college years,
he took up the game of billiards. He became so proficient, he set an
18.2 Balkline world record with a run of 799, in 1921. He took his
playing skills on the road, touring the country and amazing audiences
for nearly 35 years. He left an everlasting legacy – the
resolve of the human spirit – upon his death, in 1938.
22. W.C. Fields, despite his slapstick persona, was an
accomplished pool player.
23. Wille Hoppe was truly a legendary player. Yet, his most
famous match strangely had more to do with a penknife, than his
unequaled wizardry of the game. In 1925, he met Robert Cannefax, the
Three-Cushion champion. After several games, Cannefax, who preferred
a fast cloth, asked to move the match to a different table. Hoppe,
who was leading, said the cloth was just fine, and refused to allow a
change. An incensed Cannefax drew a penknife and savagely cut the
cloth down the center of the table. Hoppe was immediately awarded the
match, and Cannefax was suspended from competition for a year.
Ironically, Cannefax never played another match. He toured vaudeville
for several years, and then died of meningitis in 1928.
24. Throughout most of the 1800’s, the chalk used on the
new leather cue tips was carbonate of lime, better known as
blackboard chalk.
25. Most chalk used today is comprised of fine abrasives and does
not contain a speck of chalk.
26. The Church has long been a part of billiard history. From its
earliest days, the game was often denounced as a sinful, dangerous,
morally corrupt activity. In 15th century France, billiards play was
forbidden, by the Church, as well as the King. In early American
history, actual laws were passed (thanks to religious influences),
outlawing the game in many parts of the land.
27. Until almost 1920, American billiards was dominated by the
carom games. Pool was a dead, or dying sport. When the first
championship pool tournament was held in 1878, the winner, and the
event itself, all but went unnoticed.
28. The first 18.2 Balkline Championship was held in Paris, in
1913. It will probably be the only world championship in history ever
decided by the courts. After six days of play, three contestants were
tied for the first place. When a tie-breaking playoff was suggested,
Maurice Vignaux, the French champion and notorious whiner when things
weren’t going his way, scoffed at the suggestion. He insisted
the title should be awarded based on the highest overall average
(which he, of course, had at the time). Vignaux refused to continue,
and the matter wound up in the French courts. (Which, of course,
awarded Vignaux, their countryman, the title, after a delay of more
than two months).
29. No one knows exactly who, when or where the first Pool Tables
was built. The earliest documented record of a Pool Tables was made
in 1470. In an inventory of the possessions of King Louis XI of
France, his table was said to have contained the following: a bed of
stone, a cloth covering, and a hole in the middle of the playing
field, into which balls could be driven.
30. Harvey Hendrickson probably made as much money as anyone
with his “limited” skills at the Pool Tables. He actually
toured the country and amazed audiences. Not with his ability to run
racks or pocket balls, but with his freakishly unique ability to pick
up and hold 15 billiard balls at once using one hand.
31. What is billiard cloth made of? Amazingly, the main component
of billiard cloth has remained unchanged for over 400 years. Wool was
used in the 1500’s, and remains the fabric of choice today. It
has, of course, undergone some perfecting (and some wool/nylon blends
are also produced).
32. The word “cue” is derived from the French queue,
meaning tail. Before the cue stick was designed, billiards was played
with a mace. The mace consisted of a curved wooden (or metal) head
used to push the ball forward, attached to a narrow handle. Since the
bulkiness of the mace head made shots along the rail difficult, it
was often turned around and the “tail” end was used.
Players eventually realized this method was far more effective, and
the cue as a separate instrument grew out of the mace’s tail.
33. There were few, if any, women’s tournaments in the
early 1890’s. Whatever titles there were, were local, and
usually self-proclaimed. Until, of course, Frances Anderson came
along. The Indiana native merely proclaimed herself Champion of the
World, and offered $5,000 to any woman who could beat her at pocket
billiards. Anderson toured the country, playing both men and women.
Legend has it, she went undefeated for 25 years against her female
competitors. She was paid handsomely for her appearances throughout
the 1920’s, taking on challengers and giving exhibitions, in
both America and Europe. She followed this up with a well-publicized
announcement that shocked the pool-playing world. Her real name was
Orie (from Kansas), not Frances – and she was actually a he.
34. Behind the eight-ball – A dangerous position from which
it is unlikely one can escape. From a version of the game of pool.
The balls are numbered and must be potted in order. The game is
forfeited if a player’s cue ball hits the (black) eight-ball
first. A “behind the eight-ball” position leaves a player
in imminent danger of losing.
35. In the course of play, one day a visiting military cadet
remarked that first-year cadets at this particular academy were known
as “snookers”. When the cadet missed a particularly east
pot, a remark was made “Why, you’re a regular snooker”!
36. Tables originally had flat vertical walls for rails and their
only function was to keep the balls from falling off. They resembled
riverbanks and even used to be called “banks”. Players
discovered that balls could bounce off the rails and began
deliberately aiming at them. Thus a “bank shot” is one in
which a ball is made to rebound from a cushion as part of the shot.
37. At times, including during the Civil War, billiard results
received wider coverage than war news. Players were so renowned that
cigarette cards were issued featuring them.
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