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HOF INDUCTEES: 1969 - 1976
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HOF INDUCTEES |
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Herman Rambow
1881 - 1967
Inducted 1969
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Called the Stradivari of his trade by those who know, HERMAN
RAMBOW crafted custom cues for the greatest players in billiards over
the course of a 65-year career. Captains of industry and celebrities of
the entertainment world also beat a path to his door to have the
privilege of paying from $50 to $300 for one of his perfectly-balanced "Rambow
Specials." It was Herman who perfected the jointed cue by
inserting a countersunk screw in the recessed butt end, making an
extra-sturdy connection. Only death at age 86 stopped the craftsman from
his labor of love. To billiard cognoscenti the world over, there will
never be another Rambow.
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Harold Worst
1929 - 1966
Inducted 1970
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HAROLD WORST of Grand Rapids, Michigan was only 19 years old when
he played the great Willie Hoppe, winner of 51 major billiard
championships, in a demonstration game in Detroit in 1949. Hoppe soon
took an interest in Worst's playing potential, and under his guidance,
Worst won the world title for three-cushion billiards in Argentina in
1954, the youngest player to compete in world competition. He
successfully defended this title for many years. Equally skilled at
pocket billiards, Worst dominated play to win the All-Around titles in
both the 1965 Johnston City, IL and 1965 Stardust Open championships.
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John Wesley Hyatt
1837 - 1920
Inducted 1971
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JOHN WESLEY HYATT, known as the father of the American plastic
industry, was an inventor rather than a player, but his invention of the
celluloid plastic billiard ball in 1868 revolutionized the billiard
industry. Hyatt began his search for a suitable synthetic billiard ball
material when a New York billiards firm offered a $10,000 prize for a
substitute for ivory. Hyatt's earlier attempts involved shellacking a
paper pulp sphere and a ball made of layers of cloth.
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Frank Taberski
1889 - 1941
Inducted 1975
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FRANK TABERSKI grew up in Schenectady, N.Y. At the age of 26, he
attended a pocket billiard championship in New York City, and came home
convinced he played as well as the champions. The next year, he entered
and placed third behind Johnny Layton. From then on, he was almost
invincible. In those days, 450 point challenge matches were the means of
competition; the prize a ruby and diamond studded gold medal with the
proviso that any one who won 10 consecutive challenge matches could keep
it. Alfredo DeOro had come closest with five straight defenses. By 1918
Taberski had accomplished the impossible and the medal was his.
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Johnny Layton
1887 - 1956
Inducted 1976
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JOHNNY LAYTON, born in Sedalia, Mo., won the world's three-cushion
championship 12 times, defeating such champions as Willie Hoppe, Welker
Cochran, Jake Schaefer, Jr. and Augie Kieckhefer in the 1920s and 1930s.
Layton recorded the high three-cushion game mark of 50 points in 23
innings, a record which still stands today. He was credited with
originating the method of using the diamond system, using table markers
to indicate direction of ball rebounds, a style that he perfected through
the application of his highly developed mathematical mind.
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