SENSATIONAL BILLIARDS.
INMAN DESCRIBES "FLUKE OT A LIFETIME." In billiards the really sensational finishes, where the result of a .game perhaps hangs on a single shot, or where one astounding fluke suddenly turns defeat into victory, are much more often seen among amateurs than professionals, say 3 Melbourne Inman, the famous pro., in London "Sporting Life." It is easy enough to account for this. In the first place the amateur usually play* a hundred up, or perhaps, in a club tournament, 250. The big professional matches are often 18,000 up and, obviously a "narrow" margin of two or three hundred ppints in such a game can seldom be decided by a single stroke.
Then again, when an ordinary player is left with, a situation he doesn't know what to do with, he is very apt to have a bang at the nearest ball and "play for a fluke!" We Don't Dare!
That is u thing Which no professional dare do. If the balls are in a practically unscorable position he is obliged to play a safety shot. The risk of trusting to luck would be too great, li the fluke didn't materialise he might let his opponent in for two or three hundred.
And, finally, since the professional is studying tho positional game all the time and keeping the balls in control, the actual chances of scoring a fluke are much less. His flukes usually come off when, in desperation, he attempts a big forcing shot which, in the ordinary way he would leave alone. Then occasionally the object ball races round the table and drops into an unexpected pockelt, while the cue ball fails to score.
The startling fluke I ever j-tivv occurred in a- needle-keen match between two amateurs who had long been deadly rivals, and who were playing a private game for £25 a side. It was only a hundred up, and the scores stood at 97-96 in favour of the striker, who was in, hand. lOnce In a Lifetime. The red lay tight against the top cushion, and spot white was in baulk inside the "D." In the circumstances the player decided that a safety miss was the only chance, and he played hit ball on the baulk line, intending, I sup pose, to leave it gently against one ol the side cushions. It was then the fluke of a life-time happened. The match was being played in a private house. The floor was polished oak, and there was a strip of carpet running all round the table. At the baulk end the carpet had become rucked up, and just as the player was addressing his ball this carpet slipped a few inches from under.him. The cue caught the ball fairly and squarely with the tip and sent it up the table at a nice, medium pace. It struck the red at the exact point necessary, and kissed in-off as clean as a whistle! I was fortunately not called \ipon to decide the ethics of the shot. It was certainly true that the striker never meant to hit his ball' at all, but on the other hand, the stroke was technically correct. It won the game, ant. the stakes went with, it, All the loser said was: "When they hang you, old boy, I'll bet a sovereign to a penny the bally rope breaks."
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19271018.2.28
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Shannon News, 18 October 1927, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
558SENSATIONAL BILLIARDS. Shannon News, 18 October 1927, Page 4
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Copyright undetermined – untraced rights owner. For advice on reproduction of material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.