Walter Lindrum (1932)

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  • Опубликовано: 18 дек 2024

Комментарии • 59

  • @sophiewilliams7582
    @sophiewilliams7582 8 лет назад +44

    "How do you make a thousand break?"
    "Just make nine more hundreds."
    Love it!

  • @KeithPatmore
    @KeithPatmore 3 месяца назад +3

    I can watch billiards played like this all day.. 😊

  • @SC-g2b
    @SC-g2b 5 месяцев назад +3

    Amazing to watch genius at work.

  • @lonestar6709
    @lonestar6709 Год назад +15

    You will never... see a Billiards player like Walter Lindrum again.
    The best ever.

    • @darrenryan1161
      @darrenryan1161 2 месяца назад +1

      Thought Bob Marshall is fit nicely for me, some player to win in 1936 I believe it was but definitely reached the final of the world billiards final 49yrs after the first in small city called Dublin in the emerald green island, showed the skill that was on offer I guess from a student of Walter lindrum or just two Australian genius from the same township

  • @kufujitsu
    @kufujitsu 8 месяцев назад +7

    If there was one of the old-school players who resembled Ronnie O'Sullivan, it was Walter Lindrum. He saw the right shot earlier than other players, & he was able to execute the shot quickly, without being rushed or reckless.

    • @taff6987
      @taff6987 7 месяцев назад +2

      This is what I picked up from watching this too. He was a great talent. Made billiards look very easy when it's really not. Especially the in off shots and the cannons.
      I have his maple one piece Champion cue which is in mint original condition. The one with his avatar on the butt of the cue.

    • @kufujitsu
      @kufujitsu 7 месяцев назад +2

      @taff6987 Those old one-piece maple cues were nice weren't they.

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 4 месяца назад

      The kisses sounded different from today's balls. I wouldn't be surprised if these were Ivory balls.

    • @pavarotti744
      @pavarotti744 4 месяца назад

      Makes Ronnie and everyone else look like a carthorse.

    • @ianboyle1026
      @ianboyle1026 3 месяца назад +1

      @@pavarotti744 Nah, not Ronnie. Everyone else. I've always said that Ronnie is the Lindrum of snooker. Look at his (Ronnie's) record at his peak. He was that far ahead of the next-best, and that was Walter's trademark.

  • @quizmaster85
    @quizmaster85 Год назад +8

    One of Australia's true sporting greats.

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 4 месяца назад +2

      Don Bradman or Walter Lindrum... most dominating Australian in their sport? (Whether billiards is a sport is another argument).
      They both changed the rules, although they weren't changed in cricket to inhibit Bradman, but they were changed to prohibit "leg theory," type field placings which were tactics against him.

  • @charlesscottkelly
    @charlesscottkelly Год назад +3

    Genius at work

  • @stephenmcwilliams5842
    @stephenmcwilliams5842 Год назад +8

    Quite out of this world. Wally was playing on heavy cloths and heavy balls - nothing like what professional billiards players have today. I reckon he'd have given Advani, Sethi, Russell et al. 1,000 up first to 6,000 and still won reasonably handily. Unquestionably the best of the best.

    • @101spirited
      @101spirited Год назад +4

      He could probably give them 5000 start to 6000.

    • @kufujitsu
      @kufujitsu 8 месяцев назад +3

      The heavier cloths made the pockets tighter as well. I can't imagine how good he would have been if he played today under modern conditions. It would have been mind boggling..

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 4 месяца назад +2

      You'd have to have some sort of time handicap because once he got in, he'd keep scoring forever.

  • @jordanwillrog
    @jordanwillrog 2 года назад +9

    How good is this guy 😂

    • @bartholomewchuzzlewit4356
      @bartholomewchuzzlewit4356 2 года назад +5

      The best the world will ever see, today's snooker players have taken the game to a whole new level. Unfortunately Lindrum did not take up snooker, but cue ball control in my opinion will never be equalled.

  • @darrentaylor7597
    @darrentaylor7597 4 месяца назад +4

    Must have missed the pot on 89. Notice the other white ball has changed its position between takes

  • @danielmurzellotheunknownma7481
    @danielmurzellotheunknownma7481 2 года назад +6

    Hello👋🙋‍♂️ there...
    Amazing and very interesting billiards video🎥..
    Great information very helpful video🎥..
    Thanks for sharing
    Warm regards and best👍💯 wishes
    The UnknownManCub 👍😎👨‍🏭

  • @thatwilldonicely1314
    @thatwilldonicely1314 Год назад +8

    Wonderful but the uneducated snooker admirer doesnt understand how skillful you needed to be to be this good, in the early 1930's Walter was goving his very capable opponents up to 7,000 start, thats not an exaggeration, he scored so quickly with top of the table play and nursery cannons , he was scoring perhaps four times as quickly as his opponents. By far the greatest billiards player who ever lived and with Ronnie cue sports greatest cue men.

    • @trichotillomaniac1959
      @trichotillomaniac1959 3 месяца назад

      Debatable best English billiards player. Definitely not the best pool player. That's for sure

    • @garethrichards9572
      @garethrichards9572 Месяц назад

      Anyone who has picked up a cue knows how skillful this is.

  • @matthewmurcott9833
    @matthewmurcott9833 9 месяцев назад +1

    so I'm not going to worry about my chicken wing and rocking boat cueing ever again...lol - what a superstar he was

  • @kennethtalbott2233
    @kennethtalbott2233 13 дней назад

    there's more to this game that meets the eye.

  • @geluzah
    @geluzah Год назад +8

    Wtf! I never seen a such player and i saw a lot of players. This guy seems to pot the balls like nothing. Incredible!

    • @HouseholdDog
      @HouseholdDog Год назад +2

      He was hugely famous down here in Melbourne.
      A few buildings are named after him.

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 4 месяца назад

      I believe the rules were changed because he was so good. He could rack up so many points by positioning the balls in a corner and would hit "fairy canons" (I think they were called.
      I thought everyone had heard of him... but I'm Australian.

  • @151bar151
    @151bar151 9 лет назад +18

    this is what Steve Davis joked about

    • @ErikTheCueist
      @ErikTheCueist Год назад

      in an interview? Can you tell me where i can watch?

  • @GreenDistantStar
    @GreenDistantStar Год назад +6

    He just might have been the best player to have ever held a cue.

  • @shauncorless8965
    @shauncorless8965 6 месяцев назад +3

    Can't understand why it never took off like snooker ,imagine the 1st break of a 1000,on tv they be nobody awake or alive 😮,

    • @MeStevely
      @MeStevely 5 месяцев назад +2

      English billiards did 'take off like snooker' in the early 20th century, the trouble is by the 30's professional players like Lindrum had got so good at it that they could compile breaks in the thousands quite literally lasting days. They tried altering the rules to limit consecutive types of scoring but the public just got bored of watching, and billiards never recovered.
      That's when Joe Davis (and others) started to popularise snooker and it soon replaced billiards as the favourite cue sport in Britain.

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 4 месяца назад +1

      It's a great game to play, but it gets boring to watch very quickly.

  • @tryarunm
    @tryarunm Год назад +1

    He sounds like Don Bradman 🙂👍

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 4 месяца назад +1

      He did. 😊

    • @andrewmurphy7401
      @andrewmurphy7401 4 месяца назад +1

      Bradman actually beat Lindrum at his Adelaide home after losing a friendly to Lindrum in London a year or so before. Bradman practiced daily to improve his game and got so good that he won the re-match.

  • @neildown7231
    @neildown7231 2 года назад

    Sick

  • @aldrickpada1043
    @aldrickpada1043 3 месяца назад

    I play pool, this is elite level skill

  • @MockanTroll
    @MockanTroll Год назад

    He's a Lil rough with his cue

  • @candyneige6609
    @candyneige6609 Год назад

    Il joue au billard français.

  • @tarach111
    @tarach111 Год назад +4

    Not very good this Mon, he keeps going in off..!! 😂

  • @7denots10
    @7denots10 7 месяцев назад +2

    I don’t get it, don’t looks like the dumbest thing Iv ever seen 😂 I mean how does he lose? He just gotta keep hitting the balls lol?

    • @Duffyyy94
      @Duffyyy94 5 месяцев назад +3

      Go try it. Good luck lol

  • @EO-zu5uz
    @EO-zu5uz Год назад +2

    89 he missed.. white ball moves after the cut in film the clown

  • @Harry-fc5qd
    @Harry-fc5qd Год назад +3

    Skillfull, but bloody boring.!!!

    • @Leitros-kj4qb
      @Leitros-kj4qb 11 месяцев назад +1

      No wonder snooker took off.

    • @1977ajax
      @1977ajax 8 месяцев назад +3

      Hardly a spectator sport in that sense. It was generally played by gentlemen after dinner while the ladies retired to a different room, and the conversation and the fine brandy was a large part of the attraction. A social skill as much as anything.

    • @BigAl53750
      @BigAl53750 4 месяца назад

      You must be one of those people who prefer 8-Ball. This guy would spot his opponents 5 or 6 thousand and STILL beat them! He makes it look easy, but you try getting a 100 break in Billiards and see how hard it is! I used play Snooker about 60 years ago and I was pretty good, but Billiards is in a whole other league! I managed a 147 or two, but I never could get a 100 break in Billiards.