Calendar  |   Rankings  |   Sponsors  |   Join the Tour  |   Structure  |   The Women  |   History  |   Host A Site   |

read all about the...

History of the Tour

 
Hunter Classics Custom Cues

 Contact  |  Home

r
      Today is

HUNTER CLASSICS AMATEUR WOMEN'S TOUR


Women Classics Women Descend on Brenham

 

 

By Carlos Ledson Miller, author of Stroke – a Pool Novel

 

 

“The women are back in town!” called out a young man standing at the bar in Legends Billiards.  His friend, who’d just stepped through the doorway, blinked as his eyes adjusted from bright afternoon sunshine to diffused poolroom lighting. 

This past weekend, Brenham, Texas — known for landscaped rolling hills, a picturesque town square, and addictive Blue Bell ice cream — became the epicenter of women’s pool.    

Members of the Hunter Classics Women’s Tour made their annual pilgrimage to this peaceful community in search of approximately $3,000 in total prize money.  The winner of this regional event also would qualify to play in a national event, the Women’s Professional Billiard Association (WPBA) tournament to be held in Indiana in March.

Most of the players who assembled in Brenham had come from Houston, Austin, Dallas, San Antonio and surrounding communities.  The two local players were also the youngest: Chelsea Dean (15), and Ashley Taylor (14), the daughter and niece of Legends Billiards owner and tournament host, Ted Dean.

The player who traveled the farthest was Pan Xiaoting from Shanghai, China.  In worldwide 9-Ball rankings, the WPBA’s Allison Fisher and Karen Corr are ranked Nos. 1 and 2.  Pan is ranked No. 3.  She’s the most popular female cueist in Asia, but financial limitations have prevented her playing in the United States before now.  Winning in Brenham would qualify her to begin what she hopes will be a successful WPBA career.

During a between-match break, I took the opportunity to interview Pan through her interpreter, Hawaiian Alyes Wong.  I began by saying I only knew two words in Chinese:  "Yao Ming."  (Yao Ming is the 7’ 6" center on the Houston Rockets basketball team.)  Pan broke into a smile and said, "He is from my hometown of Shanghai.  He is a Chinese hero."  I said, "He's a hero here too, but he's no longer Chinese."  She frowned uncertainly.  "Now he's a Texan," I said.  She laughed.

Pan and her interpreter had landed in Los Angeles two days earlier, then headed directly to Brenham.  I asked Pan her impressions of Texas.  She replied that the weather is very nice.  Now it was my turn to laugh.  I had to confess that during the summer Texas gets a little warmer than the current, humidity-free 65-degrees. 

Pan went on to say that she was impressed with how many good players she’d seen in this regional event.  Further, she appreciated how friendly everyone had been, going out of their way to speak to her and make her feel welcome.

Pan is similarly graceful and gracious when competing.  Her reputation preceded her, but she handles player and spectator interest with modest aplomb.  At age 23, she stands perhaps five-feet tall and weighs no more than 100 pounds, yet her breaks resound like rifle shots.  While her opponent shoots, she waits politely on her stool, a study in composure.   Presented with a shot, she moves quickly to the table and evaluates the situation.  Then a few warm-up strokes and a slight hesitation, followed by a smooth stroke that sends the object ball into a pocket and leaves the cue ball in perfect position for her next shot.

By Sunday, 50 of the original 66 players had been eliminated, but several former Hunter Classics winners stood between Pan and her objective.  Leslie Ann Rogers has been the overall tour champion each of the past five years.  Lisa Marr-Brannen once had won three tournaments in a row.  Eighteen-year-old pool prodigy Anna Kostanian had won twice in 2005, and Amanda Lampert and Orietta Strickland had each won once this past year. 

Appropriately, the American title defense fell to Hunter Classics’ perennial champion Rogers.  Displaying her intense focus and sound fundamentals, Rogers upset Pan in their first meeting, 7 to 6.  Pan 's first match on Sunday edged Kostanian, 7 to 6, in what many knowledgeable spectators thought was one of the best matches they’d ever seen.

That night, the finals took place in the middle of the poolroom.  A crowd encircled the table and cheered both competitors throughout the two-set match.   Rogers put up a stout defense, but Pan prevailed 7 to 4 and 7 to 3.  Both players received a long ovation at the end of the match.

  Pan received a check for $750, and more importantly, in March she will become the first Chinese mainland player to compete in a WPBA event.  Now her goal is to become the world’s top-ranked woman 9-Ball player.    

 

Upcoming Hunter Event: 

  • February 18 and 19:  The second Hunter Classics event of 2006 will be held in Austin at Fast Eddie’s Billiards, 100 Parker Drive.  Many of the women who competed in Brenham will be there.  This tournament will be a qualifier for the WPBA event in San Diego in April.


 
 
 

 

 

 

Want to Contact Us?             ©1999-present.    Website provided by AZBilliards.com.