Nick Varner: One Pocket Hall of Fame

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Nick Varner was inducted into the One Pocket Hall of Fame at a special ceremony held at Fast Eddie’s Sports Bar and Grill during a break from the Carolina’s Open tournament action on Wednesday night. Grady Mathews acted as master of ceremonies, and the owners and staff of Fast Eddie’s bent over backwards to make the evening memorable for Nick, as they pitched in with hard work, good humor and great hospitality.

The One Pocket Hall of Fame: Is pleased to honor Nick Varner, for his Outstanding Contribution to the Legacy of The Game of One Pocket in Elected 2004.

Nick Varner got started playing pool when he was five, when his father bought a little poolroom in Grandview, Illinois. Nick was a two-time college amateur champion in 1969-70 while a student at Purdue University. As a teenager, he became acquainted with legendary One Pocket player Hubert Cokes, who took an interest in Nick’s game and helped him develop his sharp competitive edge. Cokes also brought Nick to the jamborees at Johnston City, where he introduced Nick to many of the great players of the day, while staking Nick to play against a few of them.

* As a tournament player, Nick has won several major One Pocket events, including:

  •   1992 International One Pocket Tournament
  •   2000 Derby City Classic
  •   2000 World One Pocket Championships

* With his excellent banking skills and dogged patience, for a while Nick had a nearly unbeatable technique of an extreme up table game that commentator Bill Incardona dubbed a ‘wedge game’.  Nick would manage to herd all the balls into a tight cluster ‘wedged’ into one of the upper corners of the table. Taking advantage of this extremely conservative approach, Nick won all four stops of the 2001 Florida One Pocket tour.

Changing of the Guard

Monday, January 10, 2005

by Jim Meador

I realize that there is an ongoing evolution in pool. Younger players, such as Archer and Coltrain, have always been emerging, and always will. Older players will continue to get older, and just fade away. There are no abrupt transformations where a group of veterans are simply replaced by youth. Each year is witness to one or two retirements, and the birth of a few new players on the tour. But for some reason, it seems that there are generations of players who emerge and fade away together.

Even in the sixties, one could find the occasional pool tournament on TV. I remember watching Willie Mosconi, Deacon Crane, Wimpy Lassiter, Minnesota Fats, U.J. Puckett, Jimmy Caras and others shooting it out on TV. I wish I had a tape of those events, but home VCRs were virtually unavailable back then. I also remember the newcomers, such as Mike Segal, Steve Mizerak, Nick Varner, Jim Rempe, and Buddy Hall. Today, Segal and company are the seasoned veterans being dispatched by the likes of Archer, Coltrain, Parica, Reyes, and Morris. Maybe one day my kids will remember the days of Archer. But, then again, maybe not. Maybe, with pool soon to be an Olympic sport, there will be so many great, young players, Archer will get lost in the traffic. Maybe. Maybe not.

I know that there was indeed a transition between Mizerak and Coltrain. Players like Earl Strickland, C.J. Wiley, Allen Hopkins, Jimmy Reid and Tom Kennedy were part of it. So why does it seem like I missed something along the way? Maybe, because I did miss something.

From 1980 through 1992, give or take a few years on both ends, I was too busy to follow the game. It is during this period that the players between Lassiter and Archer were raising hell, and I simply missed it. My loss. Those players are at the top now, and can look forward to many more years of success on the tour. However, now there is Archer and company. There are the Filipinos: Reyes, Luat, Parica and their team mates. And as if that isn't enough grain for the mill along comes, Michael Coltrain, Charlie Williams and Reed Pierce. Somehow I believe the age of the superpower is over. Future tournaments will be won by an ever increasing variety of players of all ages.

I attend the US Open every year. This year (1996) Nick Varner, Hall of Famer, and probably among the most endearing (and enduring) players on the tour, was in it all the way. He made it to the semi-finals, being taken out by the eventual winner, Rodney Morris. However, Nick was not about to go down easily. The other semi-final between Luat and Reyes was taken by the Reyes, who in turn lost to Morris in the final showdown. The final match was disappointing. But, that's another story.

Other older players who refused to go down early included Buddy Hall and Dallas West. Grady Mathews made a good account of himself too. Claude Bernatchez is one of my favorites. He is representative of the old guard, with polished shoes, creased pants and black vest. His has one of the smoothest strokes on the tour, not too unlike that of Dallas West, who makes love to the cue ball. Mizerak, while still a threat, lost to Charlie Williams, a young man fresh out of high school. Charlie Williams takes his time shooting, and seems to disrupt the pace preferred by more seasoned players. I overheard Mike Massey complaining about the pace last year when he lost to the Charlie. But, a win is a win. Charlie will play his game, as he should.

Speaking of the "stroke", it appears to me that older players stroke differently than younger shooters. Their position is achieved with a minimum of cue ball roll. Very little fancy stuff. Younger players tend be more aggressive with their positioning, taking more chances by going around the table to get a better third shot. Again, maybe it is just an appearance to me, and not a fact at all. I tend to see what I want to see sometimes.

I believe the new crop of whiz kids will have to share more honors than did their predecessors. I don't see a dominating player who can consistently better his peers. Reyes, Strickland and Archer come close. But Coltrain is hot on their heels. Morris and Luat are hot tickets, and of course, the old men are still a real threat. That's what I love about pool. No other sport makes so much room for senior players.