The Hustler came
out in 1961, with Paul Newman as Fast Eddie Felson and Jackie Gleason,
memorably, as Minnesota Fats. For those
of us who’d been denied a misspent youth – “You’ve got trouble, right here in
River City, with a capital T, and that rhymes with P, and that stands for pool” – the movie was a crash
course. I didn’t actually start playing
pool myself until a couple of years later, in college, but I tried hard to make
up for lost time.
One of
my closest pals at
I got my comeuppance a year or so later, when I was in the service. I met guys in the Air Force who could have put themselves through college playing pool. Andy Gonzales was one of them. He had enormous concentration and grace. It was like watching a big cat. The languor, and then the sudden application of force. There was a pool table in the Day Room, so we’d play after lunch, before afternoon classes. There was also a snooker table, the first time I’d tried one. The difference is, the pockets on a snooker table are a lot tighter than they are on a pool table. They’re unforgiving. If you’re used to the sloppiness of eight-ball, and the sized-down pay tables in a bar, snooker ain’t the game for you. It requires discipline.
There
are a couple of places here in
I’m
embarrassed to admit that I’ve been getting my fix on YouTube. Snooker is big business in the
You
should watch this guy shoot.
Snooker
turns out to have arcane rules. You need
to see a couple of games before you begin to figure it out. And like baseball, it takes as long as it
takes. There aren’t predetermined
limits, like hockey or football.
Everything is about position. You don’t just make the impossible shot, you
have to leave yourself with a better one.
It’s about building your score, and the perfect score in snooker is 147. Fifteen reds, at a point apiece, fifteen
blacks, at seven points, and then all six colors, for twenty-seven. Trust me, you just have to watch, and you’ll
pick it up.
The reason they call Ronnie O’Sullivan the Rocket is that his best time for a perfect game is five minutes and eight seconds. This is jaw-dropping. It means you’ve sunk thirty-six balls. (When you sink a color, it’s re-spotted on the table.) This means Ronnie is pocketing a ball every eight-and-a-half seconds.
As far as I’m concerned, these guys are like gunfighters. “I’ll count to three, you can draw on two,” Wyatt Earp tells Andy Warshaw, but Andy says he doesn’t want such a chance. Snooker is much the same. Once you slip, and leave the table unprotected, O’Sullivan or John Higgins or Ding are going to clean your clock. Maybe it’s not as exciting as a gunfight, but it sure as hell is final. When you get beat, you lose to the faster draw.