![]() ![]() Laurent was losing badly in a thoroughly overmatched gambling session to Ohio road legend, Don Willis, known as the "Cincinnati Kid", who was considered by many of his colleagues of the time "the deadliest player alive". Laurent fostered Moore, they were not equals on the pool table. Laurent, a colorful character who staged exhibitions wearing a red cape and mask while billed as "The Red Devil". Moore first partnered with hustler cum exhibition player, Ray St. During the midst of the Great Depression, however, playing pool for trophies was not a luxury Moore could afford, so he took his game on the road. ![]() He won the title the next ten consecutive years. Six months after his first introduction to the game, Moore entered and won the 1929 Michigan State billiard championship. According to Moore, his high run in the game was 236 ball in a row. One point is scored for each ball pocketed in the pocket called and where no foul has transpired. The object is to reach a set number of points determined by agreement before the game-typically 150 in professional competition. In the game, a shooter may attempt to pocket any object ball on the table. Straight pool was the game of championship pocket billiards competition until approximately the 1980s when it was overtaken by "faster" games such as nine-ball. In 1961, Moore placed second at the First Johnston City One-Pocket Championship. According to Moore he immediately fell in love with the game specifically, with the game of straight pool (14.1 continuous), at which he chiefly competed during his career, though not to the exclusion of all other billiard disciplines, such as snooker which he was heralded as being unbeaten by other American players. Moore first picked up a cue stick at Car Barns, playing on the single 4 x 8 foot pool table the bowling alley had available. True to form, Moore was a quick study, for a time carrying a 233 bowling average. In 1928 at 18 years of age, Moore took a job as a pinsetter at Car Barns, a local bowling alley, earning six cents a line. "Cowboy" Jimmy Moore, Billiards Digest (1999) I was a pretty good pitcher-I played in the minors for Belle Isle, out of Detroit-but I didn't think I could make a living at it. I thought about trying to become a pro but I figured there wasn't any money in it. I was shooting in the '70s soon after I took up golf. He was very good at such gambling pursuits and was a naturally gifted athlete, attaining a Triple-A level as a baseball player in the minor leagues, once bowled a perfect game, and was a fine golfer. Moore ran card games and pursued other games of chance, even pitching pennies. His family moved to Detroit when he was 13, where other ways of making money presented themselves. He began working at a young age, supplementing his family's income variously as a cotton picker earning 35 cents per 100 pounds, managing a fruit stand, and delivering newspapers. He was the son of a Georgia blacksmith, sheriff and streetcar conductor. James William Moore was born on Septem on a farm located in Troup County, Georgia, just outside the City of Hogansville. ![]() He is an inductee of the Billiard Congress of America Hall of Fame and the Albuquerque Sports Hall of Fame. Moore also worked as a technical adviser for billiard-related scenes in television and film in such productions as My Living Doll, and the Jerry Lewis movie The Family Jewels. Moore was also known for his straight pool exhibition work, as a formidable road player, and for his unusual pool style, which included both his flamboyant cowboy dress, and his rare form of cueing technique known as a slip stroke. Throughout Moore's career he competed against the best in the world such as Willie Mosconi, Irving Crane and Luther Lassiter, winning the National Pocket Billiards Championship in 1958, the National Pocket Billiards Championship in 1965 and the Legends of Pocket Billiards Tournament in 1984. James William Moore (Septem– November 17, 1999), known as "Cowboy Jimmy Moore", was a world-class American pocket billiards (pool) player originally from Troup County, Georgia, and for most of his life a resident of Albuquerque, New Mexico, best known for his mastery in the game of straight pool (14.1 continuous).Īn excellent athlete at various sports, Moore's achievements in pocket billiards include winning the Michigan State Championship four times and placing second at the World Straight Pool Championship on four occasions. Runner-up World Straight Pool Championship 4x American pool player (born 1910) Jimmy Moore Born ![]()
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