Dec
Danny Basavich Kid Delicious
Posted by admin as Pool Players

Danny Basavich
Danny “Kid Delicious” Basavich has been playing professionally only for a few years. In that short time he has made a name for himself by winning tournaments and heads-up matches. His nickname came from one of these heads-up matches when he played a player nicknamed “Kid Viscious”, where after defeating his opponent one spectator commented, “If his name is Kid Viscious, your name should be Kid Delicious.” Well the name stuck and Danny became the player with the cool nickname that had the game to back it up. He won the Reno Open in December of 2004 and has his eyes on more tournaments. He has released a DVD lesson set and a traing cue ball to help others play the game. Danny has recently acquired Pittsburgh Steel as one of his major sponsors. Danny also has a soft side. He donates a portion of his winnings to charity.
Dec
Corey Harper
Posted by admin as Pool Players
Corey Harper

Corey Harper
Corey Harper grew up in Los Angeles poolrooms amidst the likes of Keith McCready, Efren Reyes, and Jose Parica. “I didn’t give myself enough credit when I was a kid. I didn’t think I was playing good, but I was surrounded by all those amazing players. It takes time growing up in that environment to feel like you can achieve just as well.” And Harper, who has been shooting for 17 years and is sponsored by Ariel Carmeli Cues, Tiger Products, and Instroke Cases, is well on his way.
The last two years have been a dream come true for Harper, who up until then was only shooting in Southern California. “Traveling was something I didn’t think I’d be able to do until last year. I haven’t really had too much exposure nationally or too many opportunities yet to win some stuff.”
But Harper’s performance as a new touring pro is impressive. “My goal for this year is to get a top-sixteen ranking. Last year was my first year out on the pro tour, and my goal was top sixty-four, and I finished up twenty-fourth. That was beyond my wildest dreams to do that. Of course, the ultimate goal with playing is to win a world championship. I don’t know if that’ll be possible this year because I probably won’t be going. I’m also very close with my family. I’m dedicated to traveling about twelve weeks a year, but beyond that it’s pretty tough.”
Harper got married to his longtime girlfriend a year and a half ago. “She is an awesome, incredibly understanding woman. For so many years she would listen to me talk about wanting to go out and travel and go play in the big tournaments … that ‘I knew I would do well’ … and she said, ‘Stop your whining and go do it.’ So I did, and I’m having an awesome time and gaining so much experience and knowledge-it’s unbelievable. Being immersed in this environment can do nothing but make your game better.”
Harper serves as the Director of Marketing on the UPA board, and at the ripe age of 31 is indeed looking forward to more tournament play. “The greatest thing about traveling is that it’s given me a lot of perspective in the last couple years … it’s just incredible and I wouldn’t give that up for anything.”
Playing Cue: Ariel Carmeli Custom Cue. “He made it for me about five months ago. He’s got another one coming for me pretty soon.” –www.accues.com
Weight: “That’s a good question. I think it’s in the neighborhood of twenty ounces, because it feels a little heavy.”
Shaft: Tiger X shaft. “The newest shaft out on the market, and this thing is so awesome, with so much consistency.” –www.tigerproducts.com
Shaft Diameter: 13 millimeters
Shaft Taper: Pro taper. “I prefer a very long taper. It’s probably a good twenty-inch long taper. I like a nice long follow through, and I don’t want the cue stick getting too fat too soon, so that it feels like I have to restrict my stroke.”
Tip: Tiger Everest Tip. “I play with Tiger tips exclusively.” –www.tigerproducts.com
Tip Radius: “I prefer a nickel radius.”
Wrap: Tiger Stack Leather. “Another awesome thing that Tiger Products has got going on. It’s got a nice tack to it. Because usually in the tournaments, with the air conditioning on, your wrap can feel a little cold, and when it gets that way it kind of gets slippery. So this stacked leather wrap is gorgeous, it’s tacky … it never slips.”
Preferred Hit: Medium
Preferred Joint: Wood to wood. “By far is the best.”
Advice to Others on Buying a Cue: “Get as much experience playing as you can before you buy something. The first thing you need to do is figure out a price range. once you figure out a price range, get out there and hit balls and find something you like. But once you find it, stick with it.”
Case: Instroke; leather; 3 butts, 7 shafts. –www.instroke.com
Shaft Maintenance: Slick papers. “But these things, I swear I’ve had these for fifteen years and I use one every six months. I just play with dirty shafts … I’m just used to it.”
Other Tools or Techniques: Tiger Paw cue holder. “So I can rest my cue on any table. They keep your equipment from falling over.”
Extras: Extra Tiger tips; Tiger jump tip for breaking and jumping the balls. “Tiger takes real good care of me.”
Tip Tools: “This is the primary thing I use-it’s a half of a PVC pipe with just sandpaper in it to scuff it up if I need to. And I use a Tip Pik. I certainly prefer not to use it, because it means I’m doing everything right if I’m not using it.”
Break Cue: “Right now I don’t have one. Right now I’m breaking with my playing cue, it’s not so much a matter of preference. I’ve got Ariel Carmeli building me a break cue, and I don’t have it yet.”
Jump Cue: Stealth jump cue built by Ned Morris. “By far the greatest jump cue there is.”
Dec
Charlie Bryant
Posted by admin as Pool Players
Charlie Bryant

Charlie Bryant
Charlie “Hillbilly” Bryant started playing pool when he was 5 years old, and for the last 30 years, he hasn’t put down his cue. In fact, he’s bringing out his own line of break cues in January.
The cue will be called “The Hillbilly” and will reflect what Bryant likes in break cues. He has one of the hardest breaks in the world, having been clocked at 34.7 miles per hour in Las Vegas in 1996. While he still enjoys busting up the break, Bryant says he plays more for control. “Breaking that hard always came natural to me, but I don’t break much like that now.”
The new break cue will be taking his nickname, but the story of how he got it isn’t all that elaborate. “About six years ago, someone said, ‘You sure talk like a hillbilly,’ so it just stuck from there.” He doesn’t seem to mind the name, mainly because of his upbringing in Icard, NC, a little town outside of Hickory.
Now living in Houston, TX, and playing full time, he is the certified APA teaching pro for the area. “I really love to teach and see people learn the fundamentals of the game.” Bryant’s most recent big event was the Atlanta Open on October 14-17, where he tied for ninth. He also signed with Rob Loveless of pooltourneys.com as his new touring sponsor.
As busy as Bryant is, his priorities are in pretty good shape. He has shied away from the gambling aspect of the game and recognized that his talents were God given. “The good Lord’s given me a great talent and a great ability … and the way I’m gonna give back to the game from what he’s given me is teaching people.”
Playing Cue: Jerry Olivier www.jocues.com
Shaft/Weight: Curly maple shaft. “I sometimes play with a heavy shaft and sometimes with a light shaft. The cue weight ranges from nineteen point two ounces with the heavy one and eighteen point seven with the light.”
Diameter: 12.5 millimeters
Taper: Pro
Playing Cue Hit: Stiff-hitting cue
Tip: Tiger hard
Tip Radius: Nickel
Tip Tools: Tip Pik
Joint: Phenolic
Wrap: “Leather wrap that’s been sanded down, so it’s soft on my hands.”
Shaft Maintenance: “I do it myself—I don’t let anyone else touch my cues.”
Case: Hard case.Loose in Case: “I’ve got cue silk, porcupines, a black marker, a towel, a rasp, and glove that I don’t use … there’s even a jump butt in there.”
Break Cue: Sneaky Peak butt with a thick shaft
Break Cue Wrap: “It’s a rubber wrap, about fourteen inches long. I use it so my hands don’t slide when I break.”
Techniques: “When I get a ding in my cue, I sand it where the ding is and wrap a damp cloth around it, and it swells to fill out the ding.”Advice on buying a cue: “You get what you pay for. I say the custom cues are the best way to go. The cue makers are particular, so you’ll get a better response out of a custom cue.”
Dec
Jeanette Lee
Posted by admin as Pool Players Billiards Instruction
Jeanette Lee
Visit the Jeanette Lee image gallery (/gallery2/v/Pool+Players/Jeanette+Lee/)
Probably the most famous female pool player today, Jeanette “The Black Widow” Lee was born July 9 in Brooklyn, NY, and now resides in Indianapolis, IN.
Lee turned pro in 1993 and has since acquired many titles to add to her resume, including 2003 Tournament of Champions, 17 Women’s Professional Billiard Association (WPBA) titles, gold medalist at 2001 World Games, and she is also a former Player of the Year.
Diagnosed with scoliosis at the age of 13, Lee had a steel rod implanted in her spine to alleviate the pain. She serves as National Spokesperson for Scoliosis Association, Inc. Lee also is a trustee for the Women’s Sports Foundation and works diligently to raise money for various charities.
Her sponsors include Mosconi Billiards, CFR Productions, King.com, Black Widow Billiards, and 2Thumbz. To learn more about “The Black Widow,” visit jeanettelee.com.
Dec
Bobby Pickle
Posted by admin as Pool Players
Bobby Pickle

Bobby Pickle
“Play pool. Have fun. Enjoy your life.” This is the credo of Bobby Pickle, a constant in the Nashville pool scene and a never-ending source of entertainment for true fans of the game.
Born in the early sixties, Pickle first picked up a cue at the age of five and was making money with it two years later. “My father was a pool player-I’m a natural at it,” he relays in his pleasantly accented voice. “Right now my eyes are going a little bad, which at this age is ordinary, so I’ve really got to get Lasik Surgery or glasses or contacts. I probably should have had this done a little while ago.”
Explaining how he got drawn more into the game, Pickle relates, “The only mentor really I ever had was Charlie James, and he died in seventy-six. He sort of looked out for me after my father died-he died of cancer when I was seven-he [James] owned about four or five poolrooms in the Nashville area. He looked out for me.”
Whether it was James or his own sense of fair play that molded him, Pickle exudes a strong conviction of good sportsmanship. He is the first to compliment an opponent on a good shot, the first to shake a victorious adversary’s hand, and the first to ask the question, “if you’re not having fun, why keep doing it?” It’s this attitude that makes
Bobby one of the circuit’s most well-liked players. His infectious laugh and gentlemanly ways win him fans and friends wherever he goes. But his game is never one that should be taken lightly under any circumstances.
“I’ve won many, many tournaments, mainly out of the losers’ bracket,” recountedPickle with a deep laugh, “but I won the two thousand and two BCA Amateur Championship in Las Vegas, Nevada. There were seventeen hundred and ninety-five players in it, and I went undefeated. I’ve won the Tennessee State Championship three times in the past, I’ve won the Florida State Championship in the past, I’ve won the Southeast Regional Division in eight-ball, I’ve won eighth place in the world in eight-ball in nineteen eighty-six.
“I’ve enjoyed it. It’s a game that I enjoy, and it’s a game that when I stop enjoying it, I will quit. I have a good time when I play pool. I enjoy the company, the people that I meet are great. I travel everywhere-it’s a beautiful country, the United States of America.”
Equipment Stats
Break Cue: 20 ounce South East Custom Cue www.southeastcues.com
Break Cue Shaft: 13.5 millimeter shaft
Break Cue Tip: Phenolic
Break Cue Wrap: Irish linen
Playing Cue: South East Pickle Cue www.southeastcues.com
Playing Cue Weight: 19.5 ounces
Shaft Diameter: 13.5 millimeters
Shaft Taper: 13 inch pro taper
Tip: Moori
Tip Radius: Nickel
Wrap: Irish linen
Playing Cue Hit: “It’s solid-it’s a very solid hit.”
Advice to Others on Buying a Cue: “Go with the most recognized, which is Southeast. Go with the cue maker. If something feels good to you, stick with it. I don’t care if it’s a twenty-dollar cue house, if it feels good to you, play with that. But if you’re going to buy a higher-priced cue, check them out. Check them out on the Internet, magazines, whatever. Either check with Southeast or Southwest. I prefer Southeast.”
Tools: “I use the Tip Tapper, I use the Porcupine, I use sandpaper, too.”
Shaft Maintenance: “I use Joe Blackburn.
Pro Shop Joe!” www.jobbilliards.com
Other Items: “I carry chalk, my own chalk-Master, which I prefer-I carryJohnson’s Baby Powder, which I prefer. I carry a towel, usually, in my case. And my jumpers, Jumping Pickles, and my own case, which will be out in about a month.www.billiardwarehouse.com, www.southeastcues.com
Case: “We’re having them custom made by Southeast Cues.”
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