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Sept. 13, 2023 - The Joe Rogan Experience
02:15:58
Joe Rogan Experience #2034 - Jeremy Jones
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jeremy jones
01:24:44
j
joe rogan
48:26
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jamie vernon
00:48
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unidentified
Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out!
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day.
joe rogan
Jeremy Jones, what's happening, baby?
jeremy jones
Not much, not much.
joe rogan
We finally did this.
jeremy jones
Yeah, trying to run out.
joe rogan
Yeah, man, playing you is a very humbling experience.
I should tell everybody that Jeremy Jones, professional pool player, the team captain of the Moscone Cup, which is the most prestigious international team tournament in all the world of pool.
But what I really enjoyed about talking with you for the last couple days is you're a very smart guy, a very interesting guy.
There's a lot of interest in all kinds of different things.
You're a very fascinating guy.
That's why you're so good at commentary.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I guess so.
Maybe just growing up watching all that stuff.
And I think my parents, you know, they had pretty vast interest, even though maybe didn't afford it all the time to be able to, you know, kind of go with it.
But, yeah, number five of six kids, you learn a lot of stuff.
joe rogan
Well, it's just always been fascinating to me.
The people that are really good at pool are some of the fucking smartest people I've ever met in my life.
They just got that bug.
They got that bug to chase this one thing, geometry and pockets and balls and collisions and...
They got that bug to chase it, but some of the best players that I've talked to, they're some of the smartest people I've ever met.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, that just tells you about the game, right?
How much there is to it.
Yeah, I mean, it's just, it grabs you, and, you know, if you're watching, paying attention to what goes on, it's like hardly ever the same thing.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
You know, you don't realize how much control you have.
I thought Pool was kind of like a game you played waiting on a bowling alley lane, you know, prior to playing it.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
I didn't know you could play it well.
I didn't know you could play it for a living.
You know, there's movies out there and stuff, but, I mean, it just didn't seem real.
joe rogan
How old were you when you first started playing?
jeremy jones
I really planned 17. I was 17 years old.
Yeah, I started late.
joe rogan
I started really late.
I was 25, I think.
Somewhere around 24. 24 or 25. Yeah.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
I worked two jobs and one of them, we'd have a few beers on the weekends at a pizza restaurant and play poker with our money, our tip money.
And one of the guys would go to the game room and play pool.
And he took me down there one day and Kind of hustled me a little bit.
We kind of knew each other like that.
The only thing I wanted to do was be able to beat him, Joe.
That's what I wanted to do.
So I quit one of the jobs.
I quit the pizza restaurant.
Went and got a job at the game room so I could play for free.
And kind of the rest is history from there.
joe rogan
Wow.
It's a game that just sucks you in.
I remember I used to go and play with my friend John.
And we would go to this place, Executive Billiards in White Plains.
And when we got there, you know, it was an interesting time because there was a lot of gambling going on in that place.
And the owner was a wild man.
The owner of the pool hall was this really eccentric musician.
Yeah, his name was Guy Azariti, but he would use the name Guy Hamilton when he performed.
He was this musician, like a piano player, a really good musician.
And he had some money from his career as a piano player, and he was really in a pool.
He loved the culture of it.
And so he was the owner of this joint.
And we were all just hanging out with him, having fun, and I would go there and it would be filled with people gambling.
And I was like, this place is wild.
And then I was watching like really good players play when I was, you know, just starting out.
Didn't know what I was doing.
And I was like, that looks so different than anybody else I've ever seen play pool.
Like the way they hit the ball is so soft and they're in such control.
And you're watching the ball spin off the cushions to get perfect on the next ball.
And everybody's like shaking their head.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
I'm like, that got me hooked.
That's what got me.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I think the culture of it is a big, big part of it.
I mean, just being able to gamble and not take it personal.
You know, like you hate the casino when you go lose, right?
I mean, they're like cussing the casino, they're cheating, they're doing this, right?
But I mean, where I was at, we could gamble, and then we could hang out, you know what I mean?
And then we're on teams the next day, and we're not on, you know, so that to me was pretty fascinating overall, you know?
joe rogan
There's a culture that encourages more gambling, and the best way to encourage more gambling is to not have fisticuffs every time somebody loses.
Like, some guys just get too...
Like, it's a natural feeling.
The guy just beat you.
You're angry at him, but really, you should be angry at yourself.
jeremy jones
Yeah, absolutely, yeah.
joe rogan
And it's just, that's what you're both trying to do.
It's an agreement.
Like, figure it out.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I mean, you know, you beat a guy, you don't bust his chops too often, right?
You let him cool off, and then it all's good, but...
joe rogan
Everybody goes back to, like, McCready's character in The Color of Money, which is, apparently, from what everybody tells me from those days, really, McCready was probably, like, wilder than that.
jeremy jones
No, I think I've sweated it, 100%.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I was in with a player playing Keith, and I think they played something like four days or five days with, like, an eight-hour break or ten-hour break in the middle.
joe rogan
Wow.
jeremy jones
You know, and if you stay there and sweat that kind of pool with those guys, you see stuff that...
That you're just not going to see, you know what I mean?
They get a little rum-dum, they get a little agitated, then they're hugging, you know, an hour later.
Oh yeah, it's crazy, yeah.
But Keith would definitely talk a little bit, you know?
He liked a little banner.
joe rogan
Those are the craziest legendary sessions when guys just gambled for three straight days in a row.
And people think it's bullshit.
But that's part of the thing about pool and gambling, is nobody wants to quit.
jeremy jones
Oh, no, no.
joe rogan
You don't quit when you're up, and if you're down and you still got some fight left in you, this guy might get tired.
jeremy jones
Or money.
I've seen him go through three or four steak horses in a night.
But I think you and I were talking about it earlier.
It's so much different these days.
When I went to the pool room, I was fully rested like 10, 12 hours because I knew I'm there to beat four or five guys.
I'm going to be there 20, 30 hours.
joe rogan
Wow.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I mean, you know, that's what you want.
You want to put the parlay on them.
You want to take a somewhat small bankroll and try to run it through somebody.
joe rogan
That's a fascinating way to live your life.
It really is.
I mean, out of all of the things, if you talk about American folklore, just like American culture, all the poetic characters, the professional pool player is one of the most interesting because it is the least guaranteed job that has ever existed.
jeremy jones
Yeah, there's lots of sayings.
I think it's the hard way to make an easy living.
Easy living is one of them, right?
But I mean, you know, if I was lucky, I was around some of the old school ones as well.
And the charisma is true.
You know, like if you see genuine charisma, I mean, it's a real thing.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
And that's what the old guys had.
The young guys have it too, but it's just a little different.
joe rogan
Well, everyone seems...
It's interesting because it seems like Poole is just like every other thing in that the guys today are as good if not better than anybody that's ever existed.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely.
There's more of them.
That's the problem.
joe rogan
There are so many of them.
jeremy jones
Yeah, exactly.
I'm so impressed.
joe rogan
I mean, Europe, Asia, you know, guys from Taiwan, guys from China, guys from Japan, guys from Spain.
It's like, whoa!
Killers!
jeremy jones
Most global sport there is, I think.
joe rogan
It's amazing how much talent there is out there.
Like, I'm just so impressed with what the level is now.
Because if you, like, no disrespect to anybody who played back in the day, but if you go back and you watch a tournament from like the 80s versus you watch how these guys are playing now, it's almost like it's a completely different game.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Different style, rather.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I think the equipment allows for that, too.
You know what I mean?
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
And the training.
I mean, these guys, you know, you had Federer Gorst.
I'm sure you all talked about his regimen, right?
joe rogan
He's my perfect example.
He's almost playing like a totally different style of pool.
Like, his style of pool is like...
It's so perfect.
Like, his position, the way he stands with his body, how rigid it is.
It's like, people that don't understand that are just seeing a guy just make something look easy.
But people that do understand, it's like, that's like a work of art.
Like, look what he's doing.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely.
joe rogan
It's like artwork.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
He's kind of like, you know, back in the day, you'd kind of...
You know, I used to say to a lot of guys that go on the road, hey, if they don't beat me in the first couple hours, we're all right.
You know what I mean?
Because I'd get better and better and better.
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
He kind of doesn't even look for that.
You know, he doesn't even want a gear.
It's just steady gear.
You know what I mean?
He's not looking for that rhythm, even though it's there, I guess, a little bit.
But he's just a different machine, you know?
joe rogan
Well, he's so well trained in terms of his fundamentals, and it's all so repeatable.
And I think that exists in martial arts, it exists in archery, and it really exists in pool.
If you have really good fundamentals, like that's why a lot of those snooker guys really excel when they try to learn pool.
Their fundamentals, like their stroke fundamentals are so perfect.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, they learn some things as they come over.
joe rogan
They hate when you say snooker, though, right?
Don't they give you a hard time?
Snooker.
jeremy jones
Snooker, yeah.
Or the, you know, I still don't know why a bank is called a double in snooker.
Just a one-rail bank is called a double, so there's a few of them that I'm not really sure about, but, you know.
joe rogan
That's an interesting game, too.
jeremy jones
Oh, it's a great game, yeah.
I mean, I think, you know, I think nine ball's a little better looking for today's people.
You know what I mean?
Like, Snooker has done really well, and it's got a great following, and it should, but I don't know.
joe rogan
There's nothing like breaking and running down.
jeremy jones
Yeah, the different balls, you know, you feel a little more aggression, I think.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
You know, which in sports, you usually want to feel that aggression, right?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
And if you fuck up and leave the nine in front of the hole, it's an easy victory for your opponent.
There's something beautiful about luck, the luck aspect in nine ball.
Balls bounce all over the place, and when you're down, and then all of a sudden, boom, the guy shits a nine ball in.
You're like, God damn it.
jeremy jones
And you can change it around, you know what I mean?
You can turn things around.
joe rogan
It's such an exciting game, and it never stops being exciting.
When it's played at a good level, it just never stops being exciting.
It's one of the most engaging physical games that I've ever participated in.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and you would think for a non-contact sport, the adrenaline gets way up there.
joe rogan
I know.
jeremy jones
I mean, it's pretty intense.
joe rogan
They've done heart rate monitors on guys, right?
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
What's like the highest anybody got jacked?
jeremy jones
Oh, my God.
You know, a guy you know, a couple years ago, Max Eberle, was trying to make the team.
So we traveled to Moscow, actually, to play the Russian team.
And we put him on there.
I think it was Garmin that was the sponsor or whatever.
Max, I mean some guys were 130, 125. Max was like 180. I mean it was unreal.
joe rogan
Oh my god!
jeremy jones
Yeah, and he couldn't play position at all.
It was just one of those things.
But he knocked in every shot.
joe rogan
Wow.
jeremy jones
I mean I was super proud of him, yeah.
unidentified
Fundamentals.
jeremy jones
Yeah, fundamentals.
joe rogan
Max has picture perfect fundamentals.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah.
Real straight stroke.
You know, been around a long time and it was a pretty fun experience for Max.
I was happy to see it.
joe rogan
So when you were a kid and so you start off working in this game room and you learn how to play pool then, like how long before you're just all in with pool like all day long?
jeremy jones
Oh, it didn't take long at all, and I was kind of lucky.
A little unlucky, but lucky at the same time where my parents actually split up for like 12, 13 months, right?
So during this time, I live with my mom, and there's no chance I would have ever been a pool player if they didn't split up for that little period of time, right?
So my dad just wouldn't have allowed it.
And so they got back together, and then I'm graduating high school, getting out of school, so it wasn't really up to him, but I was pretty much first road trip right out of high school.
unidentified
Wow!
joe rogan
So what did you do and how did you do it?
jeremy jones
Okay, the road trip?
joe rogan
Yes.
jeremy jones
Okay, so me and my high school buddy Doug Donovan, we went and played a lot of pool together.
We decided we're going to do this.
His was more of an experiment kind of thing.
He was going on to UT and doing his thing.
So we went to New Orleans first.
We were going to go visit my grandparents in Florida.
I knew Florida was a good spot.
So we went to Florida, we went to New Orleans first, Mississippi second, Alabama third.
You know, we hit all these spots.
You know, and back in the day, now I didn't know this as of yet because it was my first road trip, but on a normal road trip, because no cell phones, right, you go to like Waffle House when you drive in, you get you some food, and you go get the Yellow Pages.
And you literally go to where it says billiards in the yellow pages, you know, and you just start going to the payphone and calling.
And normally, the bartender or whoever answers will divulge a little more information than they probably should.
You know, like if the players knew, oh yeah, she's telling them, yeah, Joe's a good player, and he likes to game with nine ball, this guy likes to play one pocket, you know.
So you get a lot of information over the phone.
And then you just go to those pool rooms and, you know, start trying to get down.
joe rogan
Wow.
And how good of a player were you fresh out of high school?
jeremy jones
Well, you know, a year, and I was real lucky.
I had some really good players just kind of like come to the pool room and play me pool and do things with me and show me things.
And I was a pretty good athlete anyway, so I kind of picked up things quick.
But I played good enough to beat them on the way to Florida, Joe.
But they were way too smart, and we were way too dumb to stop at the same pool rooms on the way back.
Because they got us on the way back.
They kind of knew how we played, you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Got us on a few gaff games, you know.
So we kind of went empty on the way home pretty much.
joe rogan
Explain a gaffe game to the uninitiated.
jeremy jones
So a gaffe game is kind of like, you know, three card, right?
The shell game, any of those games, you know, you're going to lose.
And even if you're going to pick the right one, they start the, you know, the song and dance again.
That's how the shell game goes, right?
So it's basically a game that you're just not going to win at.
joe rogan
Like, give me an example.
jeremy jones
It sounds good, kind of like...
Oh, like this might sound good to you, but you know better now.
joe rogan
Eight ball, taking balls off.
jeremy jones
That kind of thing, or say we're playing nine ball, right?
And I might say to you, Joe, all you gotta do is drive a ball to the rail, but I get break ball in hand.
Playing nine ball.
You understand?
So, I mean, I'm basically playing the ghost, meaning I'm gonna try and run out every time, but until you start to see it happening, you're not gonna believe it.
You might go for that.
You ain't even gotta pocket a ball, you just gotta drive one to a rail.
You know, there's tons of them, so...
joe rogan
That's an interesting game to play with someone who can't play.
Because that would get them thinking, I can do that.
jeremy jones
Or naive pool rooms.
Like, if there's not any pool rooms with a good player that just really ain't running out, I mean, that just sounds like the world.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know what I mean?
That just sounds, all right, yeah, go ahead.
joe rogan
Exactly.
jeremy jones
I can drive one to a rail, that's for sure.
But, you know.
joe rogan
But the thing is, like practicing with you today, Probably not.
Especially if it's a bucket.
It's a large pocketed table.
You run out like a champion, man.
It's amazing.
I know you're not playing professionally as much anymore, but damn, that was really impressive.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I've been here a few days.
Got to play a little pool here in Austin already, so that's good.
joe rogan
Shout out to Skinny Bobs.
jeremy jones
Yeah, Skinny Bobs.
joe rogan
That's a great spot.
jeremy jones
Yeah, the 50th going on, the longest-running tournament in the country.
joe rogan
I went there last year to sweat it.
I might try to make it there this year, too.
It's fun, man.
I love watching high-level pool.
It's one of those things that I've always said, it's like an art form that only the people that do it appreciate.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and when you really get into it, you see different strikers, you know what I mean?
The strokes are different, you know what I mean?
A little bit, you know, the position's a little different at times, different things, different breakers, different ways to win, you know what I mean?
So it's attractive in that manner, I think.
joe rogan
Yeah.
No, it's just an interesting thing that there's different approaches.
You know, some guys have, like, thick shafts.
Some guys have little tiny shafts.
jeremy jones
And body types.
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Right?
We're talking about Kachi.
You know, unfortunately, what happened to him recently, but this guy looks like, you know, like, built like Gronk almost.
He's a big dude.
Yeah, huge.
And then you got, what, Little Ko, who's one of your favorites that you said?
joe rogan
Yeah, I love the Ko brothers.
jeremy jones
90 pounds soaking wet, maybe?
joe rogan
Yeah, Ko Ping Chung and Ko Ping Yee are two of my favorite guys to watch because the way they play is so smooth.
It's so controlled.
It seems like he's never hitting the ball at different speeds.
He's just hitting it at different places on the ball unless it's a very soft shot.
Everything is just like this beautiful controlled stroke.
jeremy jones
Yeah, everything looks medium, right?
Everything looks like right in the middle.
joe rogan
I forget what match I was watching recently, but he broke around the first five racks and it was just like exquisite.
jeremy jones
Oh yeah.
Little one?
The little one?
joe rogan
No, that was the big one.
jeremy jones
Oh, Copini.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Yeah, there's a third, you know.
joe rogan
But they're both assassins, right?
jeremy jones
There's a third one, you know.
unidentified
I heard.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
I haven't seen that guy play.
jeremy jones
Yeah, he's got a lot of talent.
He's way tall compared to the other two.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
jeremy jones
So it's almost like when I watch him, he's still kind of getting his coordination as a tall man because he's pretty young, you know?
So, yeah, but he's got a lot of game as well.
joe rogan
There's something about, you know, watching these guys from the time that they're really young.
Like, some guys get so good so quick.
Like, Wu Cha Ching.
You know, that dude who won the World Championships at, what, 16 years old?
jeremy jones
Yeah, the 9-ball, and then later in the year, the 8-ball as well.
joe rogan
Insane.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
At 16. Oh, yeah.
jeremy jones
I was there when he won the 9-ball.
joe rogan
He was, like, fearless.
jeremy jones
Well, he manhandled the whole tournament at 16. It was like, you could see after, like, the third or fourth round, a little different complexion on his opponents compared to everyone else's opponents.
joe rogan
Yeah, he was an interesting guy, too, because he played with a heavy Southwest, right?
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, the Chinese Taipei, former Taiwanese, right?
That's a big common cue for them is the Southwest.
Maybe more on Southwest and Chinese Taipei than anywhere in the world.
joe rogan
Well, that's what's interesting, too, is that everybody has, like, a different philosophy on whether a cue should be heavy or a cue should be light.
But what's...
You know, to people that don't know what the fuck we're talking about, what's so fascinating about it is you're trying to apply a certain amount of pressure to this thing that you're holding in your hand that you drive into a cue ball to get the proper amount of revolutions, and you're doing it across a whole table.
So it's like a nine-foot canvas.
And when the ball goes three rails and comes all the way back, it's perfect for position on the next ball.
It's one of the most beautiful things in life.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
People don't realize the cue ball curves all over the place.
You know what a masse is, right?
But like every shot it curves.
joe rogan
So how much knowledge did you have when you were out there hustling when you were 17?
Did you know?
jeremy jones
No, I mean, you know, Baytown, where I'm from, east side of Houston, so, you know, I stayed in Baytown, that area, for the first six, eight months I played, and then I, because everyone said, don't go to Houston, you know, too many great players, and So I started going there, but I started learning real quick.
Like, you know, you're trying to hang on to your bankroll, you learn a little quicker.
So I was a little savvy for a year player, probably, a little more than most, but yeah, I was pretty naive.
joe rogan
So you were telling me, we were talking about earlier, that there's parts of the country that are not good to go to for gambling.
jeremy jones
Back in the day, at least.
joe rogan
Back in the day.
But the South is overwhelmingly good to go to for gambling.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
It's just like tournaments with Calcutta's or auctions.
You know, a good auction in New York, if they even have one, might be like 5,000 in there, you know, where Buffalo's, I think they had...
I don't know, 320,000 or something like that in May.
joe rogan
Are we going to get in trouble with the IRS because of this conversation?
jeremy jones
Well, no, it's legal in Louisiana, so they don't take anything out of the purse or anything, so there's no money.
You know what I mean.
joe rogan
So for people that don't know what a Calcutta is, so if Jeremy was in a tournament, you could actually buy him in the tournament, and you're gambling against all the other people that are picking different players.
jeremy jones
Yeah, they auction everyone off on a side pod.
Yeah, so everybody gets auctioned.
Exactly, yeah.
joe rogan
And if there's a lot of gamblers, it can get pretty high, and it gets fun.
jeremy jones
Yeah, like at your country club tournament, like your club tournament or whatever, they usually do a Calcutta for each team.
unidentified
Oh, do they do that too?
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah, they do that in golf a lot.
joe rogan
Yeah, so when you were first, like, just trying to go out and get games, you're just calling people in the Yellow Pages, showing up at places, and how do you know your speed in comparison to, like, are you just guessing?
jeremy jones
Uh, a little.
joe rogan
Because these, like, your first experience is, like, traveling, right?
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you know, you hear about things, right?
You get information from people.
As you go on, you start to know people.
Oh, you meet this guy in this area, that guy in that area.
So you keep in touch, and if something's serious going on, they send you a page on the old pager.
You make a call, and you make a decision if you're going to drive across.
Now, that was a few years into it.
But at first, it was kind of like, I did some dumb shit.
Went in with a mechanic shirt on, like all green stuff.
Well, you know, Color of Money didn't get me going for a pool.
That was a little bit before.
But I did watch it.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know, so I kind of felt like...
joe rogan
You could be a hustler.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah, but immediately went away from that.
A lot better just to go in and say, hey, we like to play.
You know, and they usually get one of their better players.
And you're hitting every little town.
You know what I mean?
So you're betting on yourself a little more often, and it's easy to tell pretty quickly, unless you catch one of them smart guys that know how to stall, you know, that are hustling you, you know what I mean?
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
So that's happened.
joe rogan
Did you encounter a lot of those?
jeremy jones
A lot of attempts, you know, but normally the hustler would come up asking for a big spot.
You know, the smart hustler was the one that could come in and start playing even and then figure it out from there.
You know, it's just a little easier to get down, you know, and I knew a lot of those guys that, you know, were there to win, you know.
joe rogan
Now, when you would go to a new pool room, would you try to make a friend and maybe give them a gapper if you steered you in the right direction?
jeremy jones
Yeah, that was kind of touchy.
I mean, you might learn quickly.
joe rogan
Double steer.
jeremy jones
The same guy that's going to give you information is probably talking to someone else too, you know, kind of thing.
So, you know, best off to be able to evaluate a room pretty quickly.
And it's amazing from coast to coast how common people are in the pool room.
joe rogan
And when you were doing this did you realize like how wild it is to be a young free man just traveling the country gambling on pool?
Did you realize like how wild that is?
jeremy jones
Absolutely I got reminded of it a lot of times just because you get stuck in situations and you so you get to know people and they kind of remind you of it you know we're in Chattanooga one time we were stuck for like two weeks because it was the blizzard of 91 I don't know if you remember it was Freaking crazy.
People died in the mountains because of it and all that.
So we're stuck and we're basically walking to the pool room, sliding to the pool room, whatever, every day.
So you kind of think about it.
And then my friend that was with me, he finally had to end his road trip to go back and go to school.
So that reminds me of what I'm doing a little bit.
You know, that I'm out there just kind of going from place to place, single, just playing all the pool I can.
And, you know, it was great.
Yeah, pretty special.
joe rogan
It's romantic.
It really is.
I mean, how many movies are there about pool hustlers or that type of person who's just living this...
I mean, that's what was so attractive to me.
It was not just watching people that played really well.
It was the culture.
It was a culture of people that just weren't going to fit in with 9 to 5. It was not...
An option.
These guys were wild people.
And a lot of them were gambling addicts.
And a lot of them were really fucking smart guys.
And they were really good pool players.
And they just couldn't deal with the regular world.
They had to get to a pool hall.
Let's get to a fucking pool hall.
Were any pool players around here?
And they didn't give a fuck about anybody who wasn't a pool player.
jeremy jones
Yeah, they're comfortable, you know what I mean?
joe rogan
Yes.
And they were just around these people.
And every day would be the same kind of conversations.
Like, this guy could get the eight.
And it was always like, you don't have heart.
jeremy jones
You ain't gambling.
joe rogan
Oh, my God.
New York was so much talk with so little, like, real high gambling that I saw.
But I saw a few.
I told you about Water Dog when he played this guy, George the Greek.
That was one of the craziest things I've ever seen.
I've talked about it before.
So in brevity, he would do heroin in the bathroom, come out.
Sit on a chair for 20 minutes, just like gone, and then couldn't miss.
It was wild.
On what you would call a gaff table.
It was a very tight table, and the shims were all fucked up.
It wasn't perfect.
If you hit the point on the way in, weird shit could happen.
jeremy jones
You could hit the ball well and not go.
joe rogan
But he was firing them in like it was a swimming pool.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
He was firing him in.
jeremy jones
Sound like Earl right there.
joe rogan
His stroke was so pure.
It was so pure.
It was so wild to watch.
He was just running out.
I think he might have run like 75 and out or something like that.
Like something crazy.
jeremy jones
Yeah, which is like 300 on a regular table.
joe rogan
We just watched him do it.
It was like watching him just run ball after ball while George couldn't do shit.
He beat him a couple times like that with different games, too.
I think they played some One Pocket too.
George loves One Pocket.
But he would gamble high.
He would be the one guy that would gamble thousands of dollars.
And then there was this one dude named International Sal.
And International Sal made his money from American Express card scam way back in the day.
They would get the carbons and then they would make duplicate cards and buy a bunch of shit and then sell it.
And he would go to the pool hall and they would bring him bags of cash.
Just bags of cash.
And he was just there all day gambling, losing.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, he was probably one of the few gamblers there.
I mean, I love New York, I love the guys around New York, but it is more of like a lot of shit-talking, really, and not as much action, maybe.
joe rogan
It's interesting that that's the case, because you would think of New York, you would think of like wild people, crazy, they're out there on the streets, they're gambling, you know, like...
jeremy jones
Yeah, it's almost like they've been doing it longer, though.
Like, they're smart, you know what I'm saying?
Like, I mean, they want to win.
I mean, they want the edge, and...
You know, that's another part of it that's always awesome, you know?
When you're in there trying to match up, everyone's trying to get a little edge.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
It's just almost like human instinct to try and get a little edge, you know?
joe rogan
Did you read Running the Table, the Kid Delicious book?
jeremy jones
No, I haven't read it completely.
It's a really good book.
joe rogan
It's a really good book.
jeremy jones
He was a great guy.
joe rogan
The guy who wrote it, what is his name, John Wertheim, I believe?
Fucking just did a beautiful job painting that romantic story of them doing the same thing, like traveling the road and playing pool.
And I know there was all this talk about turning that into a movie.
I think it would have been a great movie.
I think if the right person got a hold of it and really understood what you were talking about.
jeremy jones
Yeah, Danny used to talk about it possibly becoming a movie.
joe rogan
I know they were trying to do something with it, but then they died.
I don't know.
You would have to get someone to play him that looked like him.
jeremy jones
I don't know if anyone could ever act like him.
He was awesome.
Incredible.
One time we were in Toledo at the Glass City Open and Sports Illustrated was following him.
And me and him were playing like the third round, the winners.
And I got him like 10 to 6 racing at 11. And he comes back and beats me.
But the shot he made to win at Hill Hill out of the pocket, right?
Like, you know how you set the ball up in the middle of the table?
And, you know, you put the cue ball in the corner and you try to follow it in sometimes.
I mean, and he stabbed his ball in.
But he gave the Sports Illustrated photographers the Hulk.
Yeah.
I mean, it was great.
Right in Sports Illustrated, too.
Yeah, I love that guy.
He was incredible.
joe rogan
Yeah, there's a few really good books on pool.
Playing Off the Rails, another one.
Really good book on pool.
And Tony Anagoni.
jeremy jones
Yeah, Tony.
joe rogan
But that just romantic vision of this person doing like the craziest kind of way to make a living.
You're making a living off of your skills and you're just gambling random people in pool halls and the people there are looking out for people like you because they know people like you coming to town.
jeremy jones
Yeah, but they kind of like it, too.
You know what I mean?
Oh, of course!
You know, more like, you know, we call it complimentary action.
These days, you know, when you become kind of a name, people want to play you, and, you know, they play you, you know, like Shane, he goes to these places, he'll play 50 a set.
He'll make like $10,000 playing 50 a set.
joe rogan
There was a guy who was really good who was from...
I believe he was from Montreal.
unidentified
Paul...
jeremy jones
Portier.
joe rogan
Yes, Paul Portier.
Paul Portier came through Executive Billions and robbed a bunch of people.
jeremy jones
Really?
joe rogan
Yeah, that was fun to watch.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
That was fun to watch.
jeremy jones
Because he wasn't a big gambler, per se.
You know what I mean?
He was so good.
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
He was so good, though.
He was stealing with some of these guys.
jeremy jones
He's a really good teacher up there now.
I think that's what he mainly does.
Teaches pool.
joe rogan
Yeah, he shot my friend Johnny's nuts in.
It was beautiful to watch, though.
Watching someone who's just elegantly moving that ball around the table for perfect position.
jeremy jones
He was kind of an elegant kind of guy anyways.
He was always cleaned up.
Yeah, real nice, real clean.
Yeah, it seemed like, you know, Jackie Gleason.
unidentified
There he is.
joe rogan
There he is, his beautiful mustache.
Hell of a player.
jeremy jones
Yeah, he actually lived in Texas for quite some time.
joe rogan
Oh, did he really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, he lived in the Dallas area.
joe rogan
So he was the first pro that I ever saw that came through executive.
jeremy jones
Oh, wow.
joe rogan
The first, like, real legitimate pro.
And that was, you know, early on, I was just learning pool.
Just learning pool.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, he was pretty solid fundamentally and stuff, you know, like, kind of critiqued that, so it'd be a good one to watch.
But he was kind of like just a nine-ball player, so not to pick on Paul, of course, but when you're on the road...
joe rogan
You gotta play everything, huh?
jeremy jones
You learn you gotta play, yeah.
I mean, you know, you're gonna come into some areas where they just don't play nine-ball.
joe rogan
How many times have you gone to a place that they only play bank pool?
jeremy jones
Well, I'll tell you one place.
I was in Cleveland.
So I was on the road with a...
joe rogan
Which is right next to Kentucky.
jeremy jones
Well, this is north.
Ohio's north.
Yeah, Cincinnati.
joe rogan
Cincinnati's north, by the way.
Okay.
I'm trying to figure it out because Kentucky's supposed to be the bank place.
jeremy jones
Well, I'll get back to that one I was going to talk about.
But yeah, I went through like all over Kentucky, a lot of small towns.
Now, I wouldn't say that's the only thing they would play, but that's the only thing they'd play me without knowing me.
joe rogan
Oh, okay.
jeremy jones
So like Mount Sterling, I don't know how old this pool table was, right?
These pool balls were...
So old.
They were like snooker ball size.
joe rogan
They were worn out?
jeremy jones
Oh my god.
It was unbelievable how...
They're like BBs.
I mean these balls, right?
No, this guy had been racking the balls for 60 years getting a quarter in this boot room.
joe rogan
What?
jeremy jones
60 years for the gamblers.
They're playing like...
I'm playing like 300 a game.
These guys play 2, 3, 400 a game.
joe rogan
He gets a quarter of a rack.
jeremy jones
For 60 years.
joe rogan
Did he ever get a raise?
Did he ask for a raise?
jeremy jones
I don't know.
I was only there like two days, so I don't know.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Can I get a dollar?
jeremy jones
No, he was happy as hell.
unidentified
Wow.
jeremy jones
I mean, he looked, you know, just one of the nicest guys in there.
joe rogan
Just like being there.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah.
But one time I was in Cleveland and I was on the road with a friend of mine who's a black guy, right?
So he's going to take me to these spots where black guys play mainly, you know, like in that area.
So I walk in this pool room in Cleveland called Carnegie Billiards, and the whole area is more black area, right?
So we walk in the pool room, and there's a sign that says, no nine ball allowed, no recreational pool allowed.
So they had eight nine-foots and a Bayer table, and you couldn't take your date in there.
It was all action.
unidentified
Wow.
jeremy jones
Yeah, so the guy, he's like, you're young.
joe rogan
No recreational play.
jeremy jones
Yeah, no recreational play.
Holy shit.
Yeah.
joe rogan
You know, you'll see those no gambling signs?
That's a no, no gambling sign.
jeremy jones
Yeah, exactly right.
Exactly right.
I love that no recreational play.
So the guy that ran the joint was called Shorty, and he was one of the younger guys in the place.
He's probably 35, you know, and I'm, this is 1994, so I'm 23. So he says, you're kind of young.
He says, I know you want to play nine ball.
He says, I'm going to let one set for 500. Almost the first thing he says to me.
Because he knows the guy I'm with, so we're there for action.
And so I beat him a set of nine balls.
It's the only nine ball I played.
But I stayed there two weeks playing those guys.
And all they play is one pocket banks or billiards.
That's it.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
Three cushion billiards?
jeremy jones
Three Cushion Bears, yeah.
Yeah, there were a couple really great players in there that, I mean, they kind of played, given some handicaps in the Three Cushion, but it was mainly one pocket and banks.
joe rogan
That's a wild game, Three Cushion Billiards.
It's one that just, for whatever reason, it's really hard to find.
It never took off for some strange reason in America.
Or it did at one point in time.
It was very popular, right?
jeremy jones
Yeah, it was popular, but it was more like exhibition and the tournaments just didn't pay that much.
It's almost like the old school players back in the day, they didn't make their money off the tournaments.
They made their money winning some tournaments and then getting sponsored and traveling the country for Brunswick doing these exhibitions.
You know, like Moscone and Karras and all those kind of guys.
But now it's starting to take off a little bit because Korea is so huge in Korea again.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Big money they're playing for.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
I mean, you know, not like golf money, but I mean $100,000 for first, $150,000 for first.
Yeah, big money, yeah.
joe rogan
No kidding.
And who's putting these events on?
jeremy jones
A couple Korean companies over there, because it's always been big in Korea, right?
It just kind of got rekindled again.
So now, all around the world, really, they're having bigger tournaments.
That's awesome.
They're playing for 30s and 40s.
That's good for first, you know?
joe rogan
That's great.
jeremy jones
16 players.
joe rogan
Yeah, well, I love that there's so many events now, you know, because I watch so many of them on YouTube.
Like, if you enjoy watching pool, I used to have a box of Accustats VHS tapes.
It was like this, like a washing machine box.
unidentified
Yeah, same here.
joe rogan
Filled with Pat Fleming's tapes.
And I got rid of all of them now.
Because you just fucking get everything on YouTube.
jeremy jones
Yeah, absolutely.
joe rogan
Everything's on YouTube.
jeremy jones
Well, I ask this question.
You might know.
Is there any more stream sport in the world than pool?
joe rogan
It's streamed constantly.
jeremy jones
I mean, but so many different ones as well.
So many different ones, right.
joe rogan
All these different pool rooms like Oscar's Pool Room, Hard Times in Sacramento just streamed that tournament.
I was saying I was watching Tyler Styler and Shane play.
jeremy jones
Yeah, let alone great players.
I mean, the next level down, other tournaments.
I mean, it's amazing to me.
I don't know of other sports.
I don't watch them like that.
I mean, I'm a sports guy, but maybe what you're into, some type of MMA or some type of martial arts or something, maybe that streamed a lot.
joe rogan
They don't really stream that that often.
I mean, there's only like big events that stream.
There's UFC, there's Bellator, there's...
I guess you could probably get PFL on some sort of streaming device too, right?
It has to, right?
And then one championship, I think you get that streaming too.
But I feel like...
There's so many multiple pool events that are happening, like, simultaneously.
jeremy jones
Oh, platform after platform.
Really, I mean, there's a ton.
I mean, there's no more I don't think that I've ever heard of or seen.
joe rogan
I think it's the internet.
I think the internet sort of rekindled it in some people.
And I also think it got a boost during the pandemic because people started playing again.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
I was talking to you about pool table sales and whatnot during the pandemic.
It was through the roof.
And along with that, I mean, you're going to just get a percentage that like it, you know?
And once they start liking it, they're going to watch it.
Start to know people, right?
joe rogan
So if a kid gets really good now, it's actually a legitimate career path.
But when you were doing it, you were just a wild person.
You were just out there doing wild person things.
jeremy jones
Well, yeah, it kind of made steps for me.
I mean, I kind of, like I said, I never knew you could make a living or play good pool.
And then it kind of, all right, I can make a pool.
I'm actually making cash money pretty good overall for the year.
And then I started playing some smaller.
I never really had a clue of playing professionally still.
It kind of crept up on me.
joe rogan
When did that happen?
jeremy jones
Uh...
Well, 1995 and 6, Johnny Archer kind of just told me, he said, hey, you need to start playing the next level.
You said, you're the good enough player.
It's where you should be.
It just depends on if that's what you want to do.
And so I still gambled afterwards, kind of slowed down a little more of the gambling, started to go to tournaments, traveling all over the world and the country playing tournaments.
But I started to realize I really liked the tournaments.
That's a different pressure only, knowing you can't just flip the coin again.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
You know?
So, especially because the first year, I think I played seven tournaments and I might have won one match.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
And I could beat most of the guys I was losing to.
Now, the first draw was hard because I wasn't a seeded player.
So I was that friend, you know, Lewat, you know, Johnny, you know, Kim Davenport, all those guys.
Right, right, right.
But on the loser's side, I lose matches to guys I'm supposed to beat a lot of times, but I was a different nervous.
So I was really intrigued on getting through that.
You know, like getting to where that wasn't a problem, whether I won or not.
joe rogan
It's a different nervousness than gambling.
jeremy jones
Oh, 100%.
Yeah.
Gambling, I don't recall ever starting off nervous.
I'll take that back.
Now, if I only had a couple barrels and I was on the road, you know what I mean?
And that's happened several times where, you know, let's just imagine.
Now, this is a true story even smaller probably, but let's just say I had 100 bucks, and that sounds crazy to be 1,000 miles away and he only gets 100 bucks.
And a guy's trying to say, come on, I'll play you some Hunter to gain one pocket, right?
And I'm trying to get him to play for 50 so I can have two barrels.
And he's just insisting we play for 100. So now I start off a little nervous knowing I got one barrel.
And if I quit after one game, it looks real bad as far as the action.
But I've had to do that a few times because percentages say I'm supposed to beat this guy.
You know, and pump up.
unidentified
Oh.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Percentages say.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
But I mean, you know, that's the difference.
But I mean, overall gammon, I played races to five for 5,000.
I played, the biggest set I ever played was like 38 Gs.
But I wasn't nervous at all.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
No.
I mean, I knew the person I was playing.
We probably had history of playing before.
You know what I mean?
I knew what to expect.
Generally, it was one pocket more.
Just wasn't as much big nine ball back in the day, unlike today.
But yeah, the tournament's totally different.
And you go up the scale, like Moscone Cup, it's off the charts.
joe rogan
That's why it's so impressive watching someone just break and run five racks in a row in a tournament.
It's just perfect precision.
It's because you know the control that's involved and all those little fine movements.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
But that's the thing, though.
When they heat up a little bit, you know what I'm saying?
They start to forget about it a little bit more.
They start to play better.
But even the fillers and fetters and all them, you know, and they'll tell you, but they're nervous.
I mean, you can see it out there, you know, like, you know they're nervous, but they're battling through it.
joe rogan
Yeah, I can imagine.
Poor Max at 180 beats per second.
jeremy jones
He was pissed, dude.
joe rogan
180 beats per minute is so much.
That's like a full-on sprint.
jeremy jones
No, it was way up there.
And there was somebody, I can't remember, maybe it was Shane, that was like 90 or 85, like way, way down there.
joe rogan
It shuts that hearing aid off.
jeremy jones
I know.
It's strong, huh?
joe rogan
That's such a great thing to be able to do to shut the world out.
It's not a great thing to be deaf, obviously, but...
To have that with Poole, you know, it's almost like he's like...
Do you know what a sensory deprivation tank is?
I'll show you one.
We have one out here.
You lay in salt water and you float and the water is the same temperature as your skin.
You close the door.
Total silence, total darkness.
And in the absence of sensory input, your brain becomes like supercharged.
You can think about things better.
You see everything more clearly.
And you start to almost achieve like a psychedelic state while you're doing this.
And the benefit of not having sensory input is the other senses, or your mind rather, is more free.
There's less resources that are hogging up its energy.
I imagine that's what's going on with him.
He shuts that hearing aid off and he can probably just completely concentrate on the game.
jeremy jones
Well, that and the one I thought about with him, because he's always been talked about with practice so much, right?
His regimen was so, you know, long, right?
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
But, I mean, to be able to shut him off when you're practicing and be in a pool room.
You know what I mean?
Like, really get involved in yourself.
That's the big deal with most guys that practice.
Even the ones that want to get bothered a lot.
You know what I mean?
Right.
Distractions and whatnot.
Probably also just his situation when he was there.
People just left him alone.
They kind of knew it.
joe rogan
I was hanging out with Max Eberle, and we were at this pool hall in Las Vegas that this Italian guy owned.
This guy had the best food of any pool hall I've ever been to in my life.
I mean, legit Italian food.
It was sensational.
He had lasagna and linguine with clams and garlic bread.
unidentified
This in Vegas?
joe rogan
Yeah.
This guy was from Italy, and he would bring over food for me.
He was like a chef in Italy.
He'd bring over his food from Italy, like imported mortadella and all this.
It was insane that the food was so good.
But anyway, this is while Shane was still on top of the world.
This is when he was doing the tar matches and all those things.
And we're playing, it's like a Friday night before a UFC... And Shane is practicing by himself for like five hours.
Just five hours.
Stroking in balls and getting perfect position and setting things up again and setting things up again for five hours by himself.
Didn't talk to anybody.
Just firing balls in.
jeremy jones
Well, that's the amazing thing, too.
You ever see him just sit on the back rail with the cue ball and set up the long shot, hitting it 100 miles an hour?
Well, try doing that for like three or four hours straight.
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Hitting the ball that hard.
You know, swinging the—I mean, you'll be wore out.
I mean, he'll win the hot seat at the U.S. Open and be the first guy practicing, not even play until the next day, you know, be there eight hours, nine hours, getting ready.
Next day, he wakes up, does the same thing eight or nine hours before he's got to play the big final.
Wow.
Oh no, he's sick.
He's a sicko, for sure.
But I mean, it shows, though.
joe rogan
It shows.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
I mean, you know, I don't know if there's anyone better in the tough shot, ever.
I mean, I know Filler's awesome and everything, but the true tough shot, I mean, under the biggest pressure, maybe Shane's the best.
joe rogan
Well, he's certainly in the argument as the greatest of all time.
I mean, you've got a handful of people, Efren and so many different people.
We were talking about Bustamante when he was in his prime.
But the thing about all those guys, like when you go back to the early days of tournament play and Efren Reyes and the Filipino invasion, that was all gambling.
It was all gambling.
jeremy jones
Oh, 100%.
joe rogan
One of the most exciting parts of the game of pool is this illegal aspect of it.
It's not illegal everywhere, but in a lot of places it is.
jeremy jones
As soon as someone bets on the side, it becomes illegal, I think, is how it works.
joe rogan
Oh, well, then it's illegal every single goddamn time.
Someone bets on the side in Texas?
jeremy jones
Yeah, that's a form of racketeering or something.
Yeah, something like that.
Yeah, but Efren, you know the story.
joe rogan
You couldn't even make a bet with your friends?
Like, what if you and I were playing?
jeremy jones
No, me and you are supposed to be able to play, and we could bet a million, and it wouldn't be a problem.
joe rogan
But Jamie couldn't bet on us.
jeremy jones
I think that's something.
Or if there's someone taking a percentage of some sort.
Kind of like the poker.
Y'all got the legal poker around here, right?
joe rogan
I do not know.
I don't play poker.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, they got the legal poker rooms, but they charge like pool time, you know, like by the hour, so they don't take any money out of the pot.
joe rogan
Interesting.
jeremy jones
Yeah, so it's legal now.
joe rogan
That makes sense.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's not a bad compromise.
jeremy jones
Yeah, that's okay.
joe rogan
But I feel like not being able to bet on your friend is un-American.
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
We're definitely not texting, that's for sure.
joe rogan
You know what I'm saying?
Like, if you're gambling with somebody, and you're playing someone, I'm like, I got money on Jeremy.
And if I say that, that's illegal?
If, like, you were just making an agreement?
jeremy jones
I think so, yeah.
joe rogan
That sounds so crazy.
jeremy jones
I'm pretty sure.
joe rogan
That sounds so crazy.
jeremy jones
It happened once in Houston, like right before I started, actually a couple times, but once in Houston at a pool room that I frequented, like a year or two before I really started going there, right when I was young.
They didn't take the guys that were playing.
They took the guys that We're all betting on the side.
joe rogan
Oh my god.
jeremy jones
Yeah, is that crazy?
joe rogan
Yeah.
Meanwhile, how many people are out there getting robbed?
For real robbed?
jeremy jones
Yeah, right?
joe rogan
How many people could you have been arrested instead of finding people who are gambling the wrong way?
jeremy jones
Yeah, there's a lot of those, right?
joe rogan
Yeah, it's such a...
Like I said, those two books are great at depicting the romantic aspect of it, playing off the rail and running the table.
But to have actually lived that life, when did you come off that life?
When did you stop traveling constantly?
jeremy jones
Like town to town kind of thing?
Yeah, probably around 98, 99 I really jumped up in the rankings.
Started being able to get real sponsors, paychecks, stuff like that from sponsors.
But I still didn't quit gambling.
I still played plenty of people.
It was just kind of like, it wasn't spent a lot of time traveling, you know, like waiting around.
Like, you might go somewhere, if you know it's a good spot, you know, like somebody sent you there, hey, they're gambling, you know, but it might take a little time to get to know you and whatnot before they're comfortable.
You might stay a week, two weeks, three weeks at a place.
joe rogan
Was there the fear that you entering into professional tournaments would knock your gambling?
jeremy jones
Nah, by this time, everyone knew.
It didn't take long before a few trips I went by my middle name.
Yeah, because there were magazines that you could see what's going on around the country.
You just might not get a picture or a video of it or whatever, so you start to hear names.
The first time I went to California, I did that, actually.
It worked out nice.
joe rogan
What did you do?
Did you just use a different name?
jeremy jones
Well, it's a funny story, and I think he can laugh about it now, but you know Marcus Shamat is, right?
From Sweden.
So there was a guy that was staking him and a lot of other great players, and he was big action, the guy was.
And I knew Marcus was out there, and so I'm in hard times.
I think I told you about this today with Keith, but the only two people in the hard times that knew me All right.
Uh, was Keith and Jose Perica.
All right.
So everyone else didn't know who I was.
So Marcus Shamat is standing next to two other guys that I know play, but won't play kind of thing.
So I go up and I asked those two guys, I was like, you know, one of y'all want to play some, you know, 50, a hundred dollar sets of nine ball, you know?
Knowing, Marcus is going to just jump right on me.
You know what I mean?
Like, he's right next to him.
So, long story short, that happened.
But I introduced myself as Tyler, my middle name, you know.
Like, I just did, you know.
So, we start playing.
He beats me a set for 100 playing even.
I quit.
He offers me the eight, beats me a set for 200.
I quit.
Now he offers me the seven.
So now his stake horse starts coming over near me because Marcus is just stealing this little four or 500.
It ain't got nothing to do with a stake horse.
You know what I mean?
This is like pocket money.
So now his stake horse comes over and he's kind of interested in the game.
And he says, he'll give you the seven, but you got to bet, you know, everything you got.
I got like 25 or 30,000 on me.
You wouldn't know it, but I do.
So I can't pull out $25,000 or $30,000.
They're going to know something's up.
So me and my buddy, we just talked for a second.
So we ended up pulling out like $4,500.
So we played for a little bit.
And now we're playing seven ahead.
We were playing a race of seven for the 100 and 200, right?
So now he thinks he's stealing.
Because, I mean, the way I played in the other two sets, you know what I'm saying?
So he just comes out like...
Gangbusters.
He got me like four games down.
I'm talking to my buddy.
I'm like, man, this is sick.
We're going to get beat in this spot right here.
I'm getting a seven, you know?
So finally I get a shot, and I start to run out.
Now I'm starting to run out.
And so his steak horse sits there, and he says, man, ain't this something?
You know what I mean?
He says, we thought we were stealing.
It looks real bad now.
So I beat him that set.
So now, at hard times, you've been there, right, in L.A.? Yeah, Bellflower?
Yeah, so they got the player side, right, with the tight tables, and they got the looser tables.
Well, he had me on the looser tables thinking, you know, I'm just a sucker, you know?
So he says, the Steak Horse says, double the bet, and we'll give you the eight on the tight tables, right?
So this is, like, really good for me.
You know, now I'm getting a spot on even a tougher table.
So I beat him that set.
But during that second set...
A friend of mine had built me a cue and sent it out to the guy that ran the tournaments in LA, right?
So I'm going by Tyler.
And this guy walks up and he says, real loud.
He says, are you Jeremy Jones?
joe rogan
Oh, no.
jeremy jones
He says, if you are, I got a cue for you, you know?
And I was like, no, I ain't Jeremy.
Because I'm in the middle of this $9,000 set playing, you know?
So I said, no, I ain't Jeremy Jones.
And I just sent him on his way.
And then the next day when I came in, Mark knew who I was.
And everyone spilled the beans kind of thing.
I had to go tell the guy, all right, that's my cue and everything.
joe rogan
Was he mad at you?
jeremy jones
No, no, not at all.
He understood.
It's kind of like a...
Funny story around there now, I think.
But Marcus was mad at me for a little while.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's what I was asking.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah, because he was European, you know?
And it was just kind of like, you know, if someone got me like that, you know, it's going to sting, but it's going to be more like, all right, touche kind of thing.
You know what I'm saying?
Later on, you know, we're going to laugh about it and stuff.
But it took...
It's almost like if you first beat Efren, he walks by you, but he don't say much to you for about a month or two.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
He's got to let that wear off a little bit.
But it took Marcus probably about a decade before...
It was bad, yeah.
joe rogan
So when he beat you the first two sets even, were you hustling a little?
jeremy jones
Well, I might not have put forth my best effort, but he played real good, you know what I mean?
He was just, alright, let me pick up this four or five hundred and get out of here.
joe rogan
But were you purposely trying to set something up?
jeremy jones
Well, I thought, you know, I'm definitely not trying to win for 200. You know what I mean?
Like, his steak horse, who now is actually, after that trip, became a real good friend of mine.
You know, at that time, he was known you could beat him out of, you know, 40 and 50, you know, 1,000, right?
So you're not going to start off doing anything like that for 200 or so.
joe rogan
So when you first start playing, you play good, but you're not really bearing down.
jeremy jones
Right, right.
joe rogan
So you're showing him that you can play a little, but you might miss some shots that...
jeremy jones
Plus I wanted to see him play.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know, I heard the name.
unidentified
Right.
jeremy jones
I kind of wanted to really see, because eventually to beat him out of the real money, he's going to be playing even.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know what I mean?
Because he's another great player.
So that eventually was going to happen, but...
Marcus ended up having to leave the country for his visa.
He got shortened up or something like that.
He actually ended up leaving the next day.
But I stuck around for about a month.
joe rogan
In these other countries, is there a lot of gambling going on?
Obviously in the Philippines there is.
But is there a lot of gambling going on in these other countries where all these players are emerging?
jeremy jones
Some of Asia, for sure.
Southeast Asia especially, I think.
You know, Thailand, like you said, Philippines, Indonesia.
Europe here and there, not a whole lot.
Not a whole lot at all.
And I think it's more of the steak horse kind of situation.
It's just not the mentality.
You know, there's not a steak horse.
You know, people aren't just thinking, oh, let me go put somebody else in action for thousands of dollars and give them a half.
You know, it's just not your everyday thing.
joe rogan
That's one of the fun parts of American pool culture, the steak horses.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely.
They're some of the biggest characters.
joe rogan
Yes, wild, crazy people with tons of money.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and how they got it.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Yeah, and they're interested in gambling on pool.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I've been paid in buried money quite a few times.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
It stinks.
jeremy jones
It stinks, usually.
Oh, yeah.
Not nice.
joe rogan
Wow.
jeremy jones
The whole car stunk.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Oh yeah, real bad.
joe rogan
Do you think there's like bodies next to the...
jeremy jones
I don't think so.
joe rogan
Why did it smell?
Just mildew and shit?
jeremy jones
Yeah, I think so.
Yeah, I'm talking about...
Yeah, I think this has been there a long time.
30 years.
Yeah.
There was a guy one time, we were in South Carolina.
It was another place that I frequented in the summers, especially because we gambled to golf.
But this guy, Frank...
And he was a great, great guy.
And he was coming in overalls, didn't know he had a penny, but he staked a lot of players, and he did a lot for the pool community.
So he comes in one morning, because we'd all meet at the pool room about 10 a.m., and we'd all make a golf game.
Then we'd go out to the golf course, Gamble Golf, come back to the pool room and make pool games, right?
It was awesome.
I mean, the whole summer was like this.
So Frank comes in one morning.
And he looked real upset.
And he never looked upset.
Always happy.
Even if he lost, he was happy.
And so I said, Frank, what's wrong?
You okay?
He said, I come out my back door and I saw one of my bushes dug up today.
So, one of his sons that is kind of, you know, a little detached at times from the family.
For one reason or another, he let it stay there.
And he said he knew it right.
It was a $30,000 bush.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, and so he took it like a grain of salt.
It was kind of like a disappointed father kind of thing, more than upset.
He had plenty of money, you know.
But it's amazing what people do with their money.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's a Hunter Biden-type move.
jeremy jones
Probably got it buried a little better.
joe rogan
You'd need something.
Yeah, but I mean, digging that money up for a need.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, it's just the kind of people that would go to these places and look forward to matching these guys together.
It's a famous story that's in the Running the Table book about Chicago Billiards.
Did you ever go to that place in Connecticut?
jeremy jones
I don't think so.
joe rogan
Chicago Billiards was owned by this one eccentric millionaire.
Who would encourage gambling.
And if no gambling was going on, he would put money up for guys to play.
He just wanted action constantly.
They had dorms there.
They had beds in the back.
People would sleep there.
Guys would come in, stay for days.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
Well, that's, you know, just like poker games, Houston had a big underground poker scene.
And the same thing with pool rooms.
If you have a guy that owns the poker room that's action, that's the best games.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
I mean, they're putting the money back in play.
And the same thing with the pool room.
If the pool room owner's involved, I mean, you know, he's going to have players around.
He's going to have options usually.
And that's some of the best spots for action.
joe rogan
I remember I was watching this guy play and he just got off the phone and he said, my wife just told me if I don't come home now I'm getting a divorce.
And he goes, rack the balls.
jeremy jones
I've heard that in so many words before.
joe rogan
But he said it out loud.
He just racked the balls.
He was like, we're going to keep playing.
jeremy jones
Oh yeah.
joe rogan
Looks like I'm getting divorced.
jeremy jones
Not the first time she's told him that probably.
joe rogan
It's just too addictive.
Those places are too addictive.
I couldn't wait to get back to them.
When I'd go on the road and I'd do stand-up, couldn't wait to come back, get to the pool room.
What's going on?
Who's playing who?
What's happening?
jeremy jones
I knew a lot of truck drivers that played, got to play all over in different places.
But the one thing about pool, even if you're not around the game, it's hard to leave totally the game.
It's good to hit the ball well.
It feels good.
It's just like golf, they say, when you hit it well.
It feels good, right?
joe rogan
Have you ever considered writing down some of your road stories?
Oh yeah.
Like Danny DiLiberto has a book out.
jeremy jones
Yeah, there's a good friend of mine, Harley Bryan.
I think I was telling you a little bit about him the other day, but he's like a legend guy.
And I tell him all the time, I'm like, I mean, this is like the best book ever if you just...
Tell your stories.
He was raised on a riverboat.
Like Porky's.
You know what I mean?
His dad owned two of them in Jacksonville.
The only two.
Just the stuff he was raised around.
Then he was a great pool player around Jimmy Karras and Moscone and all those guys.
He's 84 now, I think.
But yeah, it'd be good to put the pool stories down.
There's a lot of them.
joe rogan
That's one of my favorite expressions is a riverboat gambler.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Those type of people.
Oh, he's one of them riverboat gamblers.
Just wild people.
jeremy jones
People around the water.
I mean, I don't know what it is.
I mean, I'm from there, too.
Baytown, like, right on it.
joe rogan
What do you think it is?
jeremy jones
It's a very carefree kind of, you know, once you don't bathe for a week, you kind of figure out you ain't got to that often again.
I mean, I don't know.
I don't know what the mentality is.
joe rogan
But why is gambling so prevalent in the South?
That's what's fascinating to me.
Like, why is it so a part of the culture?
I mean, and even in things that are illegal, like rooster fighting and shit.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Gambling is, like, so pervasive.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I mean.
You know, you would know more about the North than I would, but maybe the faster paced?
I mean, we always just said it's kind of like California, a little bit the same.
They're real smart, and they play well, and they're not just going to take much of a beating.
And the thing is, even if you play well, the difference, a lot of people, like I used to get accused for being the best of the game, which who doesn't, right?
But people would mistake that also for someone who could play well under pressure.
You know, if you play well under pressure, it looks like you got the best of the game.
You know, most people can't.
So even if you beat them playing really well, so it's hard to make another game off of how you just played because you played really well, like that's hard to do all the time playing pool.
You know that, right?
joe rogan
I've seen guys try to match up for hours.
Give up, come back, give up, come back.
And then finally, oh my god, they're racking the balls?
They're rocking the balls.
jeremy jones
It's happening.
I go to senior centers, right?
Sometimes.
Play pool with some of the older guys, or I have a lesson there, or something like that.
They talk a little shit without any gambling.
You know what I mean?
And some of it goes way back.
It's pretty nasty stuff.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
jeremy jones
Well, I mean, kinda.
They don't know me from Adam talking about something real personal from 25 years ago.
joe rogan
That's hilarious.
jeremy jones
Yeah, that's pretty funny.
I think the barking in general, being somewhere you're allowed to bark a little bit.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Well, it's just a part of the fun of it all.
It's like wild things are happening.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely.
joe rogan
People are accusing people, sharking them.
jeremy jones
Well, the swings, too.
The ups and downs.
You know, you just broke so-and-so.
He's dead broke.
He was borrowing money yesterday.
He spent two days out of the pool room, and he's won 10,000 cents.
You know what I mean?
So you keep track of everyone.
Especially if you're in a place locally that you live at that has action.
You always want to know what's going on a little bit.
joe rogan
And for people that don't understand the allure of this, you're constantly engaged in some kind of competition.
It's constant happening.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
And it's endless.
joe rogan
Yeah, it's endless.
jeremy jones
Yeah, it ain't, you know, basketball, what are you going to do?
Are you going to go shoot free throws maybe or maybe play one?
I mean, this is endless.
The pool games and the handicaps, the partners.
joe rogan
There's no season.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Y'all two could play mean.
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
You know, we could rotate.
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
I mean, there's just all kinds, so.
joe rogan
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Have you ever sat down and tried to write out some of these stories?
jeremy jones
Not really the stories, no.
I've written some stuff for teaching, because I do a lot of that, right?
And it helps to write it down, yeah, for sure.
But no, not the stories.
Probably should.
joe rogan
You definitely should.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
I think I'd want to know somebody, though, like really trust putting it in someone else's hands.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know, someone's going to come across with it.
joe rogan
Have an author.
jeremy jones
Yeah, give it the right climate, whatever that is.
You know, I'm not sure what that is yet.
joe rogan
Maybe we could just record some of your stories.
Just record some of your stories and make YouTube videos.
That might actually be even better than a book.
jeremy jones
Well, some of them are pretty crazy.
joe rogan
Give me a crazy one.
What's the craziest one?
jeremy jones
Oh, I can't tell you.
Probably maybe the craziest.
I'll tell you later on the craziest ones on here, but...
Let's see.
So one time I was in a tournament in Mississippi.
To get on with this, I won the tournament.
Tough tournament.
Johnny Archer, all the great players, and his bar table.
So I won like 8,000.
So by the time I won the tournament, I think I was about 25,000 losers in the casino.
Okay?
Like, terrible trip.
I mean, I wasn't even trying.
You remember Tony Ellen?
joe rogan
Yes.
jeremy jones
So he was 20 minutes late to get a steak dinner at the Horseshoe.
It cost me about $12,000.
I went down there and said, let me just pitch $300,000.
And they just pounded me, right?
So I got the tournament money after winning.
It was $8,000.
Went straight to the cage and cashed it.
Went straight to the blackjack.
Yeah, I had it about 10 minutes.
So the $8,000 was gone.
And so this guy that was playing there, his name was Frank Seals.
And he was a legendary steak horse.
And he used to take CJ when he was a kid and a lot of players throughout the years.
And he said, hey, if you're ever bored and you want to come up to Morristown, Tennessee, I got a kid, I'll let you play.
If you still want to play, you know.
I like the way you gamble is what he said.
He watched me play blackjack.
Blow all my money, right?
Yeah.
So, yeah, I told him.
I said, you ain't dealing with no blackjack up there if I go up there.
So anyways, I go up there.
So he's got this guy.
Mark Owens was his name.
Good player.
And real high gear.
Maybe not the most steady player, but real high gear.
So we're playing, we start out playing races to nine or ten or something for a thousand.
So long story short, I got him 10,000 loser, okay?
And it's because we raised it and whatnot.
And so now the whole town, this is a small town, okay, just up in the northeast corner of Tennessee.
So the whole town starts coming in, and this is their hero.
So my buddy starts taking bets on the side.
So now I got him 10,000 loser, and he says, we want to play a set for 10,000.
This is what Frank says, the steak horse.
He says, but we need to call eight.
You know what the call eight is, of course, right?
So I said, okay, yeah.
So we're going to race to 15. So we're betting about 10,000 on the side.
Okay, so we're playing a set for like 20. Alright, because my buddy's got a list of bets this long with all the town people.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
So...
It's 9-8 me.
Instead of playing safe on the 8, I try to jack up off the end rail and stab it in and draw my ball.
You know what I mean?
And I bobble it.
He makes it.
He breaks and runs 5 racks.
He's up 14-9.
So now he breaks, going to 15. And the 4-9 is wired over the spot.
He makes an incredible shot on the 1. He's got the 3 down the rail, and he's just got a cupcake on the 4-9.
So I turn to my buddy, and I said, man, we ain't got but like 8,000 left.
You know?
Because we were winner.
We start off a thousand a cent.
I said, we can't lower the bet.
You can't do that.
Then they know you're short.
You know what I'm saying?
So I'm like, what are we going to do?
You know, we'll get more money tomorrow.
Whatever, right?
So the pool table's here, right?
He's shooting at this corner.
Now Frank is the only guy, he's sitting right here on a stool chair, right?
Like a little school chair.
Everyone else is way back over here besides me and my buddies over here, right?
All the people watching.
So he knocks a three in, Mark does, and he comes down.
He was kind of one of those guys that would fire the nine in.
You know what I'm saying?
You've seen him.
He rifles this 4-9.
He could have just tapped it and it would have rolled right in the corner.
This ball went down and swirled around in the pocket.
Jumped almost all the way back out to the spot.
That's how far it went.
unidentified
Oh my God.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
All the money's on the light, right?
So Frank, he knows about pulling the balls aimed directly at Frank.
So as soon as he hits it, he knows it's in.
So Frank starts to get up and get the money.
I said, oh, Frank.
I said, the nine's on the table.
You know, Frank's like 75 years old.
He's got glasses.
So I said, the nine's on the table.
He says, oh, I'm sorry.
You know, like he didn't realize it didn't go in.
Well, it did go in.
It just came back out.
Yeah.
Never pocketed another ball the whole set.
I played safe on that first shot.
I broke around, played safe, broke around, beat him 15-14.
unidentified
Wow.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
So now the kid, he quits, and he's literally crying out on the stairs, okay?
So Frank says, come back the next day, we'll play you some more.
So we come back the next day, we start out playing like for 3,500, races to 11. So I beat him three sets.
So he says, hey, he's going to take a break.
He said, I'll play you some more in a minute.
I'm like, sweet, man.
This is good.
Good action, you know?
So Frank's sitting in this chair right here, and the kid's practicing a little bit, and he hits a ball in that same pocket.
It jumps the pocket, hits Frank dead in the eye, right?
And his glasses.
And blood's going everywhere.
Jesus Christ.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, it was ironically crazy, right?
So we end up having to quit, and we never end up playing again.
So the same pocket that kind of saved me the day before, right?
Kind of got them the next day, and we ended up never playing, yeah.
Funny story.
joe rogan
What kind of shitty table is that?
jeremy jones
It was a gold crown, but it had replacement pockets.
You know, the big black ones that go in, they're kind of bulky, they kind of move around a little bit.
joe rogan
Oh, they did a shitty job.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah, it's old school pool hall.
joe rogan
Oh, man.
jeremy jones
Yeah, that Frank, he was something else.
So, I'm playing, right?
And he pulls up his overall.
And I see a gunshot wound in his leg.
I said, dang, Frank, you got shot?
He said, yeah, my wife shot me about 10 years ago.
I said, man, you mean your ex-wife, don't you?
He says, no.
He says, I'm still with her, right?
I said, damn.
About three months later, she killed him.
After I played it.
Yeah, same lady that shot her ten months before.
joe rogan
Oh my god.
She shot him dead?
jeremy jones
Dead.
Dead.
I think she did six months in a mental place and then she's out.
joe rogan
Oh my god.
Six months?
jeremy jones
Six months, that was it.
joe rogan
That's it?
She shot him twice?
Did he not tell about more?
jeremy jones
I think it was like five of them in the chat.
Oh, when she killed him.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Remember, I was telling you about that buried money.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Frank gave me some of that buried money.
joe rogan
Did he?
jeremy jones
I think he was kind of like a numbers guy, you know, how they run the lottery out in the country on their own and stuff.
Yeah, I think he did stuff like that.
joe rogan
My grandma was involved with that.
jeremy jones
Yeah, that's a big thing in the Northeast.
joe rogan
The numbers.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's another thing.
People look forward to that kind of gambling.
I just don't like restrictions on gambling, and I know people have problems with it.
I really do.
And I've met a lot of people that are, like, degenerate gamblers, and it's horrible to see.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
They get so addicted, they're so fucked up, but it's still fun, and especially with pool.
It's really fun.
I mean, you're gambling in a game of skill, you know?
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Well, I've rarely seen where someone got their life messed up, really.
I mean, don't get me wrong.
You might not have the best relationship with your lady, you know, if you're gone all the time for days at a time, right?
But as far as like financially, really, I've seen it in other kind of gambling and whatnot.
You've seen that, I'm sure.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
I've seen it in all kinds of sports gambling in particular.
Did you ever see that movie, Uncut Gems?
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Adam Sandler movie.
jeremy jones
What a great fucking movie.
joe rogan
What a great movie.
jeremy jones
I like him in serious roles a lot.
joe rogan
I never saw him in one before that.
But that one is so good.
You get so much anxiety watching that.
You're like, don't do it.
What are you doing?
unidentified
What do you do?
joe rogan
But we know guys like that.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely.
100%.
joe rogan
Those are real guys.
jeremy jones
Oh, 100%.
And it's amazing because usually they get a hold of a big number and it still doesn't matter.
unidentified
No.
jeremy jones
You know, like, I mean, it used to be like, all right, they got a hold of 30. How long are they going to hold on 30?
They got a hold of 60. They want to choose.
Yeah, but I mean, same guys, I'm seeing them get a hold of fives and six hundreds and still going and losing it all.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Quickly.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Month, three weeks.
Well, I mean, I went broke tons of times.
I mean, I'd tail between the legs, coming back home.
But I mean, I'd leave with like 3,000, 4,000.
And normally, odds are the value I was going to come back pumped up.
Sometimes I came back broke.
But it wasn't like, you know...
Like that.
joe rogan
I was watching Dana White gamble in Vegas.
He was playing blackjack.
And when I got there, he was down 600,000.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
And Ronda winning it all back and plus 600. Oh yeah.
But like, jeez.
jeremy jones
Like the guy we were talking about earlier with the IPT. Yes.
He used to like that real high dollar background.
20, 30,000 a hand.
Yeah.
Goes fast.
joe rogan
Oh boy, it does.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's just so crazy.
But I guess when you just have like fucking shit tons of money and that's the only way you can get excited.
Like it has to be dangerous.
Phew.
jeremy jones
I don't know.
I think there's got to be a hypnotism.
I mean, they obviously aren't going to go broke, right?
joe rogan
Right.
I mean, maybe.
jeremy jones
I hope not.
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, look, it could happen if you just get really wacky and keep going.
jeremy jones
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, you could get yourself stressed out about it, I guess.
But, I mean, you know.
joe rogan
I mean, it hasn't happened to the people that I know, but it could.
jeremy jones
If I had a billion dollars, though, I think if I like playing blackjack, maybe a thousand hands is just going to be just as satisfying.
Just maybe be pool player.
I don't know.
joe rogan
I don't know, Jim.
jeremy jones
Maybe my mentality.
I don't know.
unidentified
No, generally.
jeremy jones
Because I used to play a lot higher than a thousand a hand.
joe rogan
A couple of whiskeys in there.
jeremy jones
Yeah, oh, 100%.
joe rogan
Yeah, a couple of whiskeys in there.
You might be betting 150,000 a hand.
jeremy jones
Yeah, maybe.
Let's go.
I will raise my bet if I get 100%.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
jeremy jones
That's pool room mentality.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Only way to win, really.
joe rogan
Yeah, yeah.
It's just the art of that, though, is what was always fun to watch.
The art of, like, making the game and guys going in knowing that they were eventually probably going to play even.
Like, bro, I need the eight.
I need the fucking eight.
I need the breaks.
I need this.
I need that.
And there's this banter back and forth and everybody circling around watching this drama play out.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and you're trying to figure out who to bet on.
You can't just sit on the sidelines waiting for the nut game.
You won't get any action.
It's like a poker guy, they know he's got aces or kings if he moves all in kind of thing.
joe rogan
And there's also an understanding amongst guys who gamble with each other on a regular basis.
That it's, I'm losing money to you, you're losing money to me, we're all good.
jeremy jones
Yeah, absolutely, yeah.
joe rogan
Just a little going this way, a little going that way.
There's very rarely were bad feelings after guys would lose money gambling.
I mean, some guys get pissed off at themselves.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
I mean, areas were different, I think.
And maybe you noticed it more.
But like Houston, where I was from, it was just gambling was gambling.
Personal was personal.
I mean, it was the most cut and dry I'd ever been around.
joe rogan
And it was cut and dry sort of in the culture, like as you were coming up.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
joe rogan
Everybody did it that way.
jeremy jones
Absolutely, yeah.
Whereas, like Dallas, we always called it more nitty.
Oh, right.
But, you know, it just was more nitty.
It wasn't necessarily nitty.
It was just more nitty, you know?
joe rogan
More nitty than Houston.
jeremy jones
Than Houston was, yeah.
joe rogan
Nitty is someone who's very conservative in your gambling.
jeremy jones
Yeah, fire one barrel at you.
joe rogan
Yeah, if you lose, you're out of there.
jeremy jones
Yeah, exactly.
joe rogan
Where did that term come from?
jeremy jones
Nitty?
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
You got me.
joe rogan
That's an old term.
jeremy jones
Old.
unidentified
Old term.
jeremy jones
And it's used.
Not just pool.
I mean, I've heard it outside of pool.
Well, you know, Houston's been around on the map for the gamma.
That's where Cesar Morales went, right?
That was Efren's name.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
And he passed as a Hispanic guy from San Antonio.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
That funny story, if you ever heard of Red Walling, the guy that owned Reds.
So I guess Efren was in the semifinal.
and uh of the tournament still under the name of Cesar Morales and he went up to Red Walling and he says uh Mr. Walling he said I gotta ask you a question or I gotta tell you something my uh my real name isn't Cesar Morales am I gonna get forfeited out of the tournament and not get my money you know he won before he got to win in the tournament he wanted to fess up you know and so Red Walling said yeah just tell us your real name now so we'll make sure you get paid you know Pretty crazy.
And that was only like 10 miles from where I was from, but it was before my time.
joe rogan
So how did those guys know in the Philippines that there was so much gambling going on in Texas back then?
And how did they know they could take this kid from the Philippines who turns out to be one of the greatest players, if not the greatest, that's ever lived, and then just rob everybody?
jeremy jones
Well, Philippines are everywhere.
Filipino people are everywhere.
I mean, if you were to go to the tournament, it could be just...
I mean, you just pick a place out of the blue.
If there's a Filipino champion there, there's going to be groves of them showing up to watch.
So they kind of keep control of it.
Plus there was one of the original guys that was a top player, him and his brother, Rudy Pascual and J.R. Pascual.
They came before Ephraim and all of them and they lived in Houston.
So they kind of brought them there for the Reds tournaments and all the action.
Yeah.
So kind of like we said, information.
joe rogan
Right.
So they knew Efren in the Philippines.
So Efren had already had a name.
So if he had tried to come over as Efren Reyes, people would already have heard about him.
jeremy jones
Absolutely.
100%.
Yeah.
And the thing is, then at that point, there were only a couple of them that you heard about from outside of America.
So Efren was one of them for sure.
It wouldn't get lost.
joe rogan
What is the highest stakes match you've ever seen played?
unidentified
Ooh.
jeremy jones
Probably in New Orleans, there's a billionaire, Carl Baum.
I think he took on like $220,000 worth of action.
He's not a good player, but he's not a bad player.
He's kind of a guy, and he comes down to a few tournaments, and he plays real expensive, you know, on the bar table.
He plays nine ball, plays another weak player, or he plays a good player getting a huge spot.
joe rogan
And, like, how much is he gambling?
jeremy jones
Oh, I mean, he's playing, like, six or seven games ahead or maybe a race to nine for, you know, in the middle might be, like, 80 or 100, but he'll bet another 100 on the side.
Well, when he comes, everyone bets against him just because, you know, you're looking at the odds, right?
unidentified
Right.
jeremy jones
Yeah, you're looking at...
And that's another thing in the pool room.
You might get a good game, but you know the guy's short.
joe rogan
Right, right, right.
jeremy jones
So you've got to wait.
You know what I mean?
Right, right.
You want to get the most out of that game if you do win.
joe rogan
You've got to wait until he's plump with cash.
jeremy jones
Exactly, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's interesting.
It's like all knowing when to pull the trigger, what not to, knowing where a person's at.
jeremy jones
Yeah, when it's all prime.
joe rogan
Knowing if they scored recently.
jeremy jones
Yeah, how they're playing.
Tony Allen used to be the best because, you know, people bet on matches and stuff at the tournaments, you know, and he was just so in tune with all the players, you know, some of them their personal lives, you know, and like that makes a huge difference because pool's so mental.
joe rogan
Oh yeah, your girlfriend breaks up with you, you're kicked out of your apartment, now you might play like shit.
jeremy jones
Or if a couple things don't go your way to start with, Tony used to say that.
If he doesn't get it his way at the beginning, he's going to fold.
He's just in that mood right now.
You know what I'm saying?
Just so many different aspects.
joe rogan
So is the biggest games that you've seen played really from people that aren't the best players?
What is the most high stakes between two elite players?
Because I know there's some legendary stories about guys like Bustamante and Johnny Archer locking horns and Johnny runs the whole set and Bustamante ups the bet.
jeremy jones
Yeah, it says flip the coin.
Yeah, double the bet and beat him.
I played on that table that was in Toledo, Ohio.
13 and out.
13 racks and out.
joe rogan
Johnny broke and ran 13 racks in a row.
I would never play with another cue ever for a second in life.
That cue is an extension of his soul.
To run 13 racks is so bananas.
How much were they gambling?
jeremy jones
I think it was like 10. You know, back then, the thing is, these days, of course, everything's gone up in money, right?
But there's more being bet now.
I would say like when Dennis and Shane played a few years ago.
joe rogan
Here it is.
jeremy jones
That was a huge one.
joe rogan
It says, one time we're in Toledo and Archer is playing Bustamante.
A race to 13 for 2,000.
jeremy jones
2,000.
joe rogan
Okay.
13 consecutive racks in a row.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
unidentified
Whew.
jeremy jones
Johnny was a bad hombre for money.
He was awesome in the tournament.
joe rogan
He was awesome in everything.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I just rarely ever saw him get beat for money.
I mean, he would give guys that were really good players the last four, you know what I mean, on tight tables.
I got this, Jeremy.
No problem.
Never saw him practice, by the way.
joe rogan
You know, the guy like Johnny, with all this new technology with carbon fiber cues and the like, does a guy like that still play with a wood shaft?
jeremy jones
I think so.
I haven't seen him play in quite some time.
It's been probably four or five years that I've seen since he's really been in a big competitive tournament.
Now, he did play the U.S. Open a couple years ago.
Won a match or two, but didn't do that well.
So I don't think he's playing a ton.
Last I saw him play, I think he opened a pool room there in North Georgia.
Doing a lot of that.
joe rogan
But this technology thing, like we were talking about this today, that there's these new carbon fiber shafts, and they're very consistent, and all these people play with them.
But some players still prefer the feedback that they get from wood, and that's part of the enjoyment of the game.
It's like feeling that feedback in your hand.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I think so.
I mean, you definitely get a lot of feel.
You know, you don't want something that's like a 2x4, right?
I mean, you know, that's why, you know, players, they break in, like they get a new cue, they break in the shaft, the oil's off your hands, you know, just a number of things you like.
I think one of the things about the carbon fiber, which I like, I like it, but you get a lot out of it, but sometimes, you know, if you get a little hairy, the miss can be a little uglier.
joe rogan
Really?
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Yeah, just because it does put a little more spin on the ball, you know, it's just a little higher spin rate overall.
So, I mean, you know, if you get a little, you know, like say you desailed the ball, it could be real ugly, you know, or if you really overhit it, you know.
joe rogan
But my point was that, like, Johnny played perfect with a wooden shaft.
Like, how would you convince that guy to even try carbon fiber?
jeremy jones
Well, if you could just do it a little easier.
You know, if you can swing a little...
joe rogan
Is that what it is?
jeremy jones
Is it easier?
Yeah, you can swing a little more, you know, subtly.
I hate to say soft or anything like that, but just a little less on it overall.
Or let's say you're putting a tip and a half of left English.
Maybe you only got to go a tip or a half a tip.
So a little comfort level, you know, comfort.
Overall.
joe rogan
It just makes the ball react differently.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
And I don't know exactly all the technology behind it other than, you know, you can build them how you want.
Exactly.
Right?
Wood, there's still a little variable, I think.
joe rogan
Yeah, but the thing that bums me out is that part of Poole is the custom cue makers.
There's these guys that are making these beautiful, functional pieces of art.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely.
Absolutely.
You know, with the carbon fiber, I guess most of the companies, and really with the playability, it's gone to more performance than it is, even though they make attractive cues and all that.
But you wouldn't say it's the time and effort like some of your handcrafted cues.
joe rogan
Right.
It's just about winning.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's not about showing up with a battle bush.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Doom.
It's a great scene.
jeremy jones
Oh, I love it.
I've made a post about my new cue the other day referring to that.
joe rogan
Do you know the video game Doom was named from that scene?
jeremy jones
Yeah.
A bunch of people made that comment on the post.
unidentified
Isn't that amazing?
jeremy jones
Yeah, that is amazing.
I didn't know that, actually.
Yeah.
joe rogan
John Carmack told me that.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
And then I think, you know, how the phones listen to you.
I was watching some clip, and I think you mentioned that on one of your podcasts, I think.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, they wanted to be doomed for the video game industry.
jeremy jones
Yeah, that's crazy.
joe rogan
And it's such a great name for a crazy video game.
jeremy jones
No, it is, but where they...
joe rogan
That they got it from Tom Cruise in The Color of Money.
jeremy jones
Yeah, exactly.
Doom didn't come up from something else.
It came up from there.
joe rogan
Did you ever get into video games?
jeremy jones
You know, we had an Atari.
Played it for a few days after Christmas.
Weren't allowed inside very much.
Oh, really?
Six of us.
Oh, no, no, no, no.
Fuck out of the house.
Exactly, yeah.
Drink out of the water hose.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
jeremy jones
Oh, 100%.
joe rogan
I bet you've got an amazing immune system.
jeremy jones
It's really good.
I've been lucky my whole life, knock on wood.
joe rogan
It's from hose drinking.
Joey Diaz always talks about that.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and we swam in the bay, which was just right across the street.
joe rogan
Joey Diaz always like, I drank puddle water.
jeremy jones
Yeah, we weren't allowed there too often until later in the evening.
And my mom wasn't no neat freak or anything.
It was just pandemonium, I think.
And plus, we had tons of shit to do.
We had the park.
We had our guys.
Like I said, go in the bay, go play ball.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Sounds like an idyllic childhood.
Sounds great.
jeremy jones
Yeah, my neighborhood was cool.
It was a little lower class, but it was cool.
It was an old one, like I said, on the water.
I mean, there were fights every day, but, you know, we all knew each other, you know?
joe rogan
But my point is, it's like the video game thing gets people, too, and it got me as well for a while.
I was completely addicted to playing online Quake.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
I played, like, these 3D shooters.
I'd jump on these...
You could...
Anytime you want.
Like, it'd be 2 o'clock in the morning.
You could log on, and you find some server somewhere.
And there's some guy waiting to play.
And then you just chase after each other in these maps.
And you hear footsteps and rockets coming at you.
Oh, yeah.
jeremy jones
I've bought a lot of that stuff for the kids, Jeff.
joe rogan
Have you?
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
But what it doesn't do, though...
It's like, it doesn't clear your mind the way pool does.
When you're playing pool, I think it's a lot like archery in that it's so difficult to do, to have like precision and move the ball.
Occasionally when you do it right and you're cleaning your mind, it's like so satisfying.
Whereas video games are just exciting.
When it's over, you're like cracked out.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
When I would end, I'd be like, oh Jesus Christ, like adrenaline's all fucked up.
Like, I gotta go home.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
This is too much.
It's too crazy.
jeremy jones
Yeah, we talk about a 12-year-old.
It's like, oh, he's been on there too long.
You know, we can tell the difference for sure.
Pull him.
joe rogan
Get him some moisture and some vitamins.
jeremy jones
100%.
Well, that game room I got a job in, it had like probably 80 video games.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
jeremy jones
And then it had, you know, we didn't have a nine-foot table.
We had four bites and then a snooker table and like some foosball.
A couple of them I liked, like Robotron, but like actual gaming, no, I never got into it.
I was always either playing baseball or tennis or, you know, something.
Yeah.
joe rogan
You're probably lucky.
But now people are making money doing that, too.
jeremy jones
Oh, 100%.
joe rogan
People used to say kids are wasting their lives and now they're making shit tons of money playing video games.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, I think he's one guy I know here for a long time from the pool.
He's worked for EA for like 20 years?
He's like a developer, you know, tests their games, all he does is pretty much give them feedback, I think.
joe rogan
Those guys who develop those games, those guys work hard.
Those guys work hard.
Those are long hours.
Like when they're putting together, like it's crunch time, and they're getting to the end of a video game, they basically like live in their studios and offices.
jeremy jones
Well, I believe it.
I know a guy back, he was a year ahead of me, graduated valedictorian of my high school, and he was moving to Japan, to Asia, to get into gaming, like developing gaming.
He knew a long time ago that the addiction was going to go crazy for gaming.
Like it was going to be kind of like, oh, I can stay at home and do something else here again that entertains me.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, it's, I mean, for kids, it's so captivating.
It's so difficult for them to put them down, because they're so good now, and the graphics are so insane.
It's like, it's so much more exciting.
And for a lot of kids, they don't want to be outside.
Maybe they get picked on.
Maybe someone fucks with them in school.
They just can't wait to live in that world.
jeremy jones
Well, I think the parents, too, to be fair.
I see parents that don't mind the kids being upstairs, you know, doing their own thing, self-included at times.
You know, I'd catch myself, hey, he's been up there too long, you know, kind of thing, you know.
And I guess it wasn't that long ago you were playing those games, so, you know, even guys our age can get addicted to those things, right?
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
We set up a local area network at our old studio, and I had a quick cold turkey.
I was like, this is too much.
Jamie and me and our friend Jeff would be going at it constantly, bring people in and play them.
It was fun.
It's too fun, though.
Too crazy.
Just too addictive.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I have a friend in St. Louis.
He has places all over St. Louis and other towns just for gaming.
People can come in 24-7.
They pay a membership.
Bunch of couches set up.
Bunch of gaming set up.
joe rogan
Oh, so they just come in and just log on to a game.
Yeah.
Yeah.
jeremy jones
They pay a monthly for it.
joe rogan
Makes sense.
Especially if you can't afford great equipment.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and I think it's social too.
I think it's fairly social.
joe rogan
Oh yeah, for sure.
It's probably a great place to buy weed too.
unidentified
Maybe.
joe rogan
I would imagine.
jeremy jones
They have the automated pool rooms now around the country where there's no one working.
joe rogan
Automated pool rooms.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
There's several throughout the country now where you just, you know, they got 10 tables or whatever.
They got vending machines and whatnot.
You just have your card that lets you in.
It has cameras and all that.
You have to be there with a member if you're not, you know what I mean?
Kind of like you just pay a monthly fee.
unidentified
Oh, I see.
joe rogan
Oh, so you log in with your card and however many hours you play, does it charge you by the hour?
unidentified
No.
jeremy jones
Well, a lot of them have, like, you can buy the membership plus so many hours a month at a discounted charge.
You understand?
You know what I mean?
Where you get a little break.
Or you can just pay the hourly, I think.
So, like, your credit card's on file or something.
joe rogan
That's kind of a bummer.
Because, like, the house man at a pool hall, there's always been some interesting humans.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely, yeah.
joe rogan
Like, how can you get rid of the house man?
jeremy jones
Yeah, but I mean, you know, for big places like Miami has one, Des Moines has one, Seattle has one that's kind of part-time, meaning half the week they're kind of regular, and then the other half of the week they're kind of automated on the slower days.
joe rogan
I mean, I guess it's better than not being open.
jeremy jones
Well, they can go 24-7 also.
A lot of them are 24-7 where people can, you know, kind of like a gym.
They can kind of go at their own leisure.
joe rogan
So you have a car to get in.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
So it's a club.
jeremy jones
Yeah, basically.
joe rogan
Well, that makes sense.
jeremy jones
Yeah, it's better.
I mean, a lot of people carry some bigger products out of there and whatnot, sell you some stuff, make an appointment for this.
Maybe like Tony Robles, you know him?
joe rogan
Sure.
jeremy jones
Yeah, he's part of one in Miami.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah?
jeremy jones
And he coaches a lot out of there and stuff.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Oh.
jeremy jones
Yeah, that's alright.
joe rogan
That makes sense.
That makes a lot of sense.
So, how often are you on the road doing commentary now?
jeremy jones
Probably 15 weeks a year, probably, or so.
But I do some remotely from home as well.
But the bigger events, I travel.
unidentified
Do you ever play when you go to these places?
jeremy jones
Occasionally, but not in the tournament, of course.
I'm just working, right?
joe rogan
But do you ever match up?
jeremy jones
I actually played a guy in London a couple months ago.
joe rogan
Yeah?
jeremy jones
Yeah, and I think I surprised him a little bit.
He's a good player, you know, this guy.
joe rogan
Right, but he thought you were done.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I think he thought he was going to win.
You know, he had beaten Darren Appleton last year, gambling, you know, so that tells you he's a good player, you know.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
I mean, I think he was an underdog playing Darren, but he did beat him.
And, uh, so, and he's kind of a crazy guy, like known to do some super crazy stuff, like probably stuff I can't say on here, you know.
joe rogan
Okay.
jeremy jones
You know, like, you can just imagine, just crazy.
joe rogan
Debauchery.
jeremy jones
Yeah, exactly.
And, uh, He was like a perfect gentleman with me.
No problems ever.
Just a nice guy.
Took his beating easily.
He wants to play again actually, so we'll see.
joe rogan
Oh wow.
Now a guy like that, when he wants to play again, is he trying to get a spot?
jeremy jones
No.
Too proud, this guy.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, but that's good, though.
I mean, I think he's a very, very wealthy man, kind of like family stuff, but I can't remember him ever asking for a spot from any good player.
joe rogan
Oh, wow.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, that's where he gets his juice, right?
jeremy jones
Well, he tries to beat you with the bet.
You know, like he went on, I'll play SVB, not 2,000 a set, 2,000 a game, you know, pounds a game.
Oh, right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, you know, he didn't try that with me as much, but I beat him, you know, like three sets.
We were betting that much, 1,000, right?
A couple sets, 1,000.
But then he went to like, let's play 3,000 a game, you know.
I'm like...
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
I mean, yeah, we're going to put up like 60,000, let's go.
You know what I mean?
But, I mean, let's not do it and just play like two games.
I don't want to do that.
Right.
So, better off to just play sets and know where you're at.
joe rogan
How many different pros is this guy matched up with?
jeremy jones
Several.
I mean, I think he's played Darren a few times.
He plays all the English guys over there.
I think he actually has played Shane before.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, I think, of course, Shane beat him.
But yeah, he tries to play as many as he can.
He plays a lot of local guys over in England.
joe rogan
Is that common, that guys match up like that in England?
jeremy jones
No, this is the guy that kind of creates the action.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, most of the action that happens with the good players is through this guy.
Wow.
But now, you know what English 8-Ball is, right?
joe rogan
Yes.
jeremy jones
Okay, so that's hit the scene again.
So now they're playing, you might have saw the video on it, but they're playing like huge sets, 100,000 pound sets of English 8-Ball gambling.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, huge sets, yeah.
joe rogan
An English 8-ball, it's just like different colored balls.
They don't have numbers, right?
jeremy jones
Right, and then it's basically like 8-ball.
There's maybe a couple little bitty rules that are different, but the pockets are different.
Remember like the Chinese 8-ball we were talking about?
So they're rounded pockets like a snooker table, but the balls are smaller also.
So it's all fairly comparable.
joe rogan
So the balls are smaller than pool balls?
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
How much smaller?
jeremy jones
I think they're like snooker ball size.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
Because the pockets are rounded, you know?
joe rogan
And what's the size of the table?
jeremy jones
Three and a half by seven.
joe rogan
Ooh.
Oh, interesting.
There it is right there.
jeremy jones
Yeah, that's kind of like what Jason Shaw started playing on for the most part or played a lot of.
Darren, he was a world champion at this game.
joe rogan
And do these guys use pool cues?
Oh, wow, look how small it is in comparison.
That's interesting.
jeremy jones
No, they use, like, snooker cues.
unidentified
Interesting.
jeremy jones
You know, the ash wood, you know?
joe rogan
Now, what is the benefit of that?
Because, like, I've always wanted to ask someone like you these questions.
Like, Why would they play with a cue that's really, really stiff?
jeremy jones
Well, that little ball deflects.
And, you know, the felt they play on kind of promotes deflection a little easier as well.
That thicker nap felt.
You know, you've seen the snooker felt, right?
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
It's kind of like directional felt.
You can actually wave your hand.
And the felt's so thick, it'll change directions.
You know what I mean?
joe rogan
It's much slower.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Well, they've gotten it to where it's actually much faster now than it ever was.
joe rogan
But not as fast as Simone's.
jeremy jones
No, it shouldn't be.
joe rogan
It shouldn't be.
Much slower than what American pool players play.
jeremy jones
And the lighter balls don't go as far.
Like three cushion?
joe rogan
Mm-hmm.
jeremy jones
That's why they use the big balls because they go five, six, seven rails with the cue ball, right?
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
Yeah, so it goes a long ways.
But yeah, the stiffer.
But to me, it's kind of weird because they don't put much side spin on the ball.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know, unless they have a cupcake that's laid up in the hole or they're real close to it, they aren't putting side spin on the ball.
joe rogan
Has anybody tried to develop a carbon fiber snooker cue?
jeremy jones
Oh yeah, there's a guy, Q-Tech actually did, and there's a guy that qualified for the tour using it.
He's one of Q-Tech players.
joe rogan
The weird thing is how every cue reacts.
It's like you're getting feedback from every different one that's slightly different and how it makes the ball react.
jeremy jones
Yeah, it's like tips and everything else.
joe rogan
When you're on the road, do these players ever match up with each other?
jeremy jones
Oh yeah.
joe rogan
Is that common?
jeremy jones
Yeah, Vegas is a real good one.
We're there for two, like the one I saw you at, I met you at, right?
What was that, March?
I think it was.
That one there, we're there for two weeks.
And the Europeans and the Asians, they all like to gamble.
It's just not something that happens a lot where they're from.
But when they get over here, yeah, they make a lot of games.
And they're all getting introduced to one pocket.
They all like one pocket.
You know, so.
And one thing about one pocket compared to nine ball is it's just a little easier to make a game.
There's more room to match up, you know.
So, like, say, for instance, me and you are going to play each other.
Nine ball.
Most likely, I'm going to give you a game that I can't win at, or I'm going to give you a game that you can't win at.
Like the handicap, you know what I'm saying?
It's hard to make a game unless you get two guys that are real close to each other.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
And level.
But one pocket, for some reason, the spot shows up.
So you can make it, you know, a game where I go to ten balls, you go to five or six or something.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
And it actually, in time, you'll start to see it's pretty fair, you know, if the game's right.
So...
Where you can see big ups and downs, tosses and turns.
joe rogan
It's just not as exciting to watch.
jeremy jones
No, no.
I mean, you've got to get into it.
It's not as fast, right?
But most people that get into it, they love it.
There's no doubt about that.
joe rogan
Oh, I get it.
I mean, it's a very intricate game.
But as far as getting people to tune into it, you don't have a chance in hell.
jeremy jones
Oh, no chance.
joe rogan
Zero chance.
jeremy jones
No chance.
Even though...
In the pool world, which is pretty vast, you know that, it's the biggest watched streams.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, like the head-up matches.
You know, there might be a nine-ball that comes along every now and again, but for the most part, because the one pocket people spend, you know, they got money, they're the gamblers, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's weird that that's the big gambling game.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Well, that's the only reason is, again, because you can take levels.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah.
jeremy jones
There's so many ways to match up, you know?
I mean, I played games.
You know, I played a guy in St. Louis one time, 55 to 8 or 9, I think it was.
joe rogan
Wow.
jeremy jones
So I had to spot my first, whatever, 40 ball.
42 balls or something.
unidentified
Wow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
jeremy jones
Now, that's a little extreme.
unidentified
That's a crazy spot.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah.
And, you know, you've got to bet a little higher because the games don't go very fast, right?
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
But you know what backgammon is, of course, right?
unidentified
Mm-hmm.
jeremy jones
And you know how they play with the cube?
joe rogan
Yes.
jeremy jones
Okay, so we played one pocket big money with the cube.
So say me and you are playing the cubes neutral.
Well, say you break the balls and say we're playing for 100 a point on the cube, right?
And you break the balls and break bad and sell out a shot or scratch or whatever, right?
joe rogan
Okay.
jeremy jones
Well, I can take the cube and offer it to you and you either got to take the cube and now we're playing for 200 because the cube always doubles, right?
Like backgammon.
Or you got to pay off that game for 100 and we start a new one.
unidentified
Whoa.
jeremy jones
You see?
Like the backgammon, right?
Now this is the advantage.
If I offer you the cube and you accept it, now you're in control of the cube.
So if you turn things around later in the game to where it's your advantage, you're the only one that can offer the cube back.
So now you offer it back to me and I say, I either got to pay off the $200 that we're playing for now or now it's worth $400.
You see?
But now I'm in control of the cube because I accepted it.
That's a great way to play.
joe rogan
Oh, that's exciting.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah, and you can do that almost any gambling.
You can do it on the golf course, like your guy hits, right?
And before you hit, say he hits it in the rough, I can say, all right, we're playing for 100 a hole.
I'm offering you the cube.
You want to take the cube and play for 200 this hole before you see me hit, or you want to pay off the 100?
joe rogan
Wow.
What's it called?
jamie vernon
Hammerin.
joe rogan
Hammerin?
Have you done this?
jamie vernon
A couple times.
joe rogan
Jamie's a golf junkie.
jeremy jones
Well, backgammon's the most popular place the cube's kind of known for.
You know what I mean?
In gambling.
Because it's a numbers game.
So you read your numbers, right?
Your position.
You say, I like my position.
I'm going to say, offer you the cube.
Great way to gamble, by the way.
Especially if you're there for a while.
Like you're playing a guy all the time.
joe rogan
That's interesting.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
But you can't do that with nine ball, really.
But you could do it with one pocket.
Because the one pocket, it's a vast game.
It might take an hour.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know?
joe rogan
Yeah, that makes sense.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
But still, nine ball is the most fun thing to watch.
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Well, especially these days, it's off the charts.
joe rogan
I have too much ADD for one pocket.
jeremy jones
You know how many times I've heard that before?
joe rogan
Yeah, from all people that were telling you the truth.
jeremy jones
And then they end up becoming great one pocket players?
joe rogan
Are you talking about, like, pro nine-paw players?
jeremy jones
It may be, you know, the diagnosis for your ADD. I don't have that kind of time.
joe rogan
I barely have time to play a few hours a week.
Which is frustrating, because, like, right when I get warmed up, then I gotta stop.
I gotta go somewhere.
Because we were talking about this.
It's so nuts, like, what's required to play really good pool, but it's really eight hours a day.
We both kind of agreed on that, right?
jeremy jones
Oh, you know, I used to gamble and then I'd play between, right?
But when I decided to go ahead and just...
I moved to Jacksonville, Florida, and I didn't know anyone.
Wasn't a real gambling place.
Had some action, but...
I just said, alright, I'm just going to practice.
I'm going to forget about the gambling.
I'm going to see how I can do on this tour.
It's 98 into 98. Once I started doing the eight hours a day, I went from like 24th to 1st on tour.
joe rogan
Wow.
jeremy jones
I ended up 4th on tour for that year.
Earl ended up winning the tour that year.
But then got back the first, another 10 months later, a year later, and hovered around the top 10 for 10 or 12 years, mainly just because of that practicing.
I could tell the difference between me and the next guy.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
100%.
joe rogan
And when you're practicing, you're practicing with purpose, right?
You're practicing.
You're not just throwing balls around.
You're setting things up.
jeremy jones
Oh yeah.
And the main thing to me, and this will make you practice well, is if you just put yourself in a tournament setting.
You know, like take your time, go look at your position, you know what I'm saying?
Like you don't slow play or anything, just what you would normally do.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know, most guys want to just swing the cue a little bit, and then when they get to the tournament, all of a sudden slow down.
Yeah, it's a hard thing to do all of a sudden.
Yeah.
Better off just go ahead and play speedy around the table like you've been doing.
You know?
joe rogan
That's the same thing with fighting.
jeremy jones
Oh, I'm sure.
joe rogan
Yeah.
You want to really practice the same way that you perform.
You don't want to spar hard all the time, but you definitely don't want to try to switch up what you do in the intense competition.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, you know Skylar Woodward.
Huge, huge talent.
I mean, I think he really could be number one player in the world.
joe rogan
Yeah, we were just talking about him.
jeremy jones
Yeah, just a real keen mind.
And one thing I tell him, I don't need 1,000 balls a day.
I need 300 quality balls a day.
You know what I mean?
And it's a huge difference.
I think he's doing that a little more than it's shown.
joe rogan
Yeah, it requires so much of you.
jeremy jones
It's tough.
joe rogan
It requires so much.
You have to be a full-on addict.
And those are the guys who succeed in this wild game.
But everyone is attracted to it.
Like, the idea of being a good pool player is very attractive to people.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, once you start to see that ball move...
But, well, everyone's played it.
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
That's why.
Everyone's played it.
They realize, oh, yeah, we went out and had a beer and played one game over an hour and a half.
You know, or a couple...
You know, we had four drinks and we played one game, you know, just because it's so difficult, so...
joe rogan
But it's one of those things that if you, like a person like yourself, like literally made a living running around gambling, doing it, like what percentage of the population has ever done that for years and years?
jeremy jones
Yeah, very slim.
My last regular job, I was 19. Wow.
A lot of people...
Most people laugh.
Some are not that happy about that.
They've been working pretty hard.
Which, hey, it takes a lot of hard work, though.
It's not easy.
joe rogan
Well, 100% it takes a lot of hard work.
But how did you transition from doing that to being able to do such good commentary?
Because one of the things that I really enjoy about your commentary is...
You explain all the different things that's happening to the ball.
You explain what could cause problems.
And then a lot of times those problems occur and go, yeah, that's a common mistake.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
How did you develop the ability to articulate all these thoughts so smoothly?
jeremy jones
I think, man, I grew up loving commentators.
You know, whenever I was a kid, you knew all the commentators because there wasn't cable television and all the games weren't on 38 different channels.
And, you know, so you kind of learn to know that Cosell was coming on Monday and Frank Gifford and all those guys, right?
I really like those moments.
And then I was always a sports guy.
I've always been able to pick apart the smaller things in the games.
I was a really good baseball player, believe it or not.
I was a really good tennis player.
I used to be like 260 in high school playing tennis.
unidentified
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, but I knew how to take advantage of all the smart sides of the game.
So I could pick apart, if I did it this way, he's most likely going to hit the ball back that way.
You know, I learned all the little things that would help out a slow, fat guy, right?
unidentified
Right.
jeremy jones
So, and I did the same in baseball.
Just was really good at the things I could do really well.
And I think you just learn more that way.
And then pool, I was super lucky, Joe.
I mean, I was around the Buddy Halls, Jersey Reds.
Never had a problem with Nick Varner or any of those guys helping me.
And then I played Efren all the time.
So learning the game, I learned it a lot.
But as far as the speaking side, I never thought twice about it too much.
Just kind of do it.
joe rogan
But it's that you can articulate all the problems that can occur.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, I mean, I've been teaching the last eight years.
That helps a little bit.
But I've just always been one to be able to see the table.
Like, right after the break, I can see a lot.
I can just visualize a lot.
Recognize a problem pretty easily.
And then I pay attention to where, and understand, it's probably the same thing in your field, to where the mistakes are common if you see them coming.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, you know, from one player to the next, whether it be the position they played, the stroke they made, you know what I mean?
Tip position, it doesn't matter.
They're pretty common mistakes throughout the players.
You just got to be able to recognize them.
joe rogan
One of the things that I really love about the game is that there are these two sides of it.
There is the quiet tournament play with the applause after a great run out, and then there's the pool hall, which is so different.
where people learn how to play pool and where people gamble playing pool and then where they get really good Then all of a sudden they're doing some totally different thing now Now you're playing in this very professional tournament where you're wearing slacks and nice shoes and a golf shirt and oh Yeah, it's fascinating that there's two different worlds Yeah, and they that's where the smarts come in you kind of learn to live in both right?
Yeah.
When you were coming up, was it more colorful than it is now?
Do you think that, like, because there's so many more professionals now, and they're so good?
jeremy jones
Yeah, and I think at times they're trained to be a little more machine-like, you know what I mean?
Like, oh, you can't lose this focus, you know?
And where I watch some older tapes, and I see some of the guys, you know, I look at Efren, for instance.
Man, you can tell he's nervous, but he's enjoying it.
You know, he was really a sportsman out there, and I think that's the one thing we're missing a little bit of.
Not the playing side of things, and of course the guys...
joe rogan
Personalities.
jeremy jones
Exactly, you know, and the good thing is they're getting a little more in front of the camera now, so I think it's starting to come out.
joe rogan
Yeah, but it's just like you can't fake someone being a nut.
Like, you can't fake a Keith McCready type character.
Or even an Earl Strickland type character.
Like, that's just what they are.
jeremy jones
Exactly, yeah.
You can't just come up with lines trying to.
It's just them.
Like, you know, if you ever hung out with Earl, which I'm sure you have, if he starts to tell you about stories of how we should be playing and where we should be at, it's...
It's some of the greatest experience you'll ever have, because he's so genuine about it.
Like, he really, truly believes we're supposed to be, you know, on the biggest stages.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Well, his commentary is awesome, too.
I love when he reviews matches.
He just does all by himself.
Review it.
You can learn a lot from the way he moves the ball around.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
It's very interesting just to hear the thought process behind it.
Do you have a part of the game that you like more?
Do you like the pool hall gambling part more or the tournament more?
jeremy jones
Ooh, that's hard.
joe rogan
One of the things about pool is we've got to clean up pool and stop gambling.
You hear that all the time.
And my thought is always like, no you don't.
Like, what are you doing?
jeremy jones
Oh, no.
I mean, I think society today is fine with it.
You know, of course, you don't want like real bad, bad things happening or anything like that.
And I haven't seen that like my career.
People ask me, you know, a few times I was a little sketched about this or that.
But I mean, you know, for the most part, I mean, it's just as easy as normal normal living over overall, you know, you never got in a situation where you I wouldn't say that.
joe rogan
But how many situations did you get in where they were like real?
Well, give me one that's touch and go.
jeremy jones
Well, you know, I think I told you, you know, just being safe, I'd leave the pool room and it wasn't the people you were gambling with.
It was the people that knew Cash was around.
They weren't necessarily pool players or anything like that.
unidentified
Right.
jeremy jones
And so you leave the pool room and you drive around 20-30 minutes if you're in Charleston, South Carolina or somewhere, you know, before you went back.
joe rogan
Just to make sure no one's following you.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah, I was real lucky, you know, knock on wood, I was never robbed in any form or fashion.
A few times I got warned, maybe something, guys were talking about things, so.
joe rogan
Oh.
jeremy jones
Yeah, one time in LA, I was, not to go in too deep, something I'll tell you later, but, you know, there was kind of like some mobster guys that were kind of Kind of taking aim on me and a friend of mine.
We'd won a bunch of money around there, like $100,000.
And yeah, they were trying to get it, so we got out of there pretty quick.
Yeah, and I was very fortunate.
Actually, one of the guys I beat out of probably half the money is the one that told me.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, we had become friends and whatnot, and he just came in to me one day, and he kind of laid it on the line a little bit for me.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Time to get out of Dodge.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah.
Even though, you know, he was still wanting to have a stab at his money, of course, but, you know, we continued that later on.
joe rogan
Well, that's nice of him to do.
jeremy jones
Well, heck yeah.
joe rogan
Comics have favorite places to perform.
Texas was always one of my favorite places to perform before I moved here.
Is that the case with pool, too?
There's hot spot areas.
jeremy jones
Oh, absolutely.
joe rogan
What causes these?
Is it just one great pool room and people...
jeremy jones
Sometimes, yeah.
Usually it's steakhorses.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, I mean, even, you know, you have some guys, like, I used to always bet my own money, you know, like, my whole life.
After my first divorce, my only divorce, actually, but after my divorce, I kind of went on tilt a little bit.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, you know how it goes.
Went on tilt, went on the road.
I think I told you about that the other night, first time in forever I did that, and So, you know, and of late, when you gamble, it's more like you play one big set for $20,000.
You don't start off like we used to do it, $300,000, $400,000 a game, and you try to play for a while, you know?
So, but yeah, steakhorses have a big part to do with it.
Good pool rooms have a big part to do with it.
And then something that you just kind of know, like the Derby City Classic, right?
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
You know there's 10 days of action the whole time, 24-7.
joe rogan
Someone needs to do a documentary about that.
jeremy jones
Yeah, they've had a few people the last few years.
You know, 60 Minutes was there for a little while.
joe rogan
Yeah, but I mean like a real documentary.
Like Justin and I talked about that.
Like that is one of the wildest places on earth.
For how many days is it?
jeremy jones
It's like 10 days right in the middle of winter.
joe rogan
10 days in the middle of winter.
And where are they doing it now?
jeremy jones
It's at...
It's in Elizabeth...
It's right outside of Louisville, right across the river in Indiana.
Elizabethtown is Indiana.
It's at Caesars, the casino.
joe rogan
And it's 10 days.
jeremy jones
Yeah, it's 10 days.
joe rogan
10 days of all the pool players from all over the country and the world.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Coming in and just going crazy.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, they have the tournaments, of course.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
Right?
You got the main tournaments, the three main ones.
Then you got some smaller ones.
You got the all-around, but then the action.
Yeah, like, you know, some of the big poker players come out there playing $40,000, $50,000 a game, $30,000.
Yeah.
Yeah, them guys, you know, they like their actions.
joe rogan
That's the one wild agreement every year that everyone's going to go to this wild place.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and it's been going like 20-something years now, you know, since like 99 or 98. It's been going strong.
joe rogan
Yeah, someone's got to do a documentary on that.
jeremy jones
Yeah, the Derby City classics got a lot of memories.
joe rogan
Because I think, you know, we've always talked about like a thing that could reignite pool.
Like The Color of Money did it in the 80s.
When that movie came out, pool halls opened up all over the country.
Everybody wanted to play pool.
And I feel like there's something like that that could be done today.
That would really ignite people's excitement in Poole again.
jeremy jones
I always thought a sitcom with the right script, you know, like a real script.
joe rogan
It might be a good documentary.
jeremy jones
Yeah, a documentary maybe.
joe rogan
A good documentary of the Derby City might do it.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Well, they've had some people, I think Alex Lely, you know him, right?
He was the European coach, yeah.
I think he did some stuff over there last year and he did some at Buffalo's trying to put something on Netflix maybe.
joe rogan
Oh really?
jeremy jones
Someone mentioned that.
But yeah, he's interested in doing all that.
joe rogan
If it's done right, you go to the right places and meet the right people and see the right things.
It'd give people a window into something that they didn't even know existed.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, one of those genius, you know, directors that can give it the right look, you know what I mean?
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
That's what I think Scorsese did real well with The Color of Money.
joe rogan
The scene where Tom Cruise and Keith McCready are talking shit to each other and playing in the pool hall, that's a fucking classic scene.
jeremy jones
Yeah, there's a bunch of them in there, though.
joe rogan
Yeah, oh, a bunch of classic scenes.
But that kind of atmosphere, that kind of place, like, that's Derby City.
jeremy jones
Oh, 100%.
joe rogan
It's Derby City for 10 days.
jeremy jones
100%, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, and some of the best players in the world.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and they're scrambling around like, I mean, because you want to get a bet, you know what I mean?
There's like 50 tables in this place.
This might be going on over there.
You've got to scramble down here to go.
Because there's guys there just to gamble, you know?
joe rogan
Right.
jeremy jones
I mean, don't even bring their cues.
They're just betting on the side.
They're just trying to find a side they like and bet their bankroll, you know?
Let's get the quick double up one time.
unidentified
What's the legality of that?
jeremy jones
Well, you know, for a few years, it seemed like about the fifth, sixth day, there'd start to be some guys coming around, oh, you ain't supposed to be gambling, da-da-da-da, but it seems like the last couple years, no one's ever gotten in trouble.
It's just kind of like, all right, now we've got to not talk about it for...
joe rogan
But we're talking about it on a podcast that millions of people are going to hear.
jeremy jones
I know, but just in front of these guys with the suits, you can't talk about it for about maybe an hour or two before they leave.
You know what I mean?
They're just roaming around.
But the last couple of years, I haven't heard of any problems at all.
joe rogan
I just love that a place like that exists.
jeremy jones
Well, they've got to realize, okay, I can understand that they've got a casino and they'd rather you gambling in the casino.
But that tournament still brings a ton of casino action for them.
joe rogan
Oh my God.
jeremy jones
Through the roof.
joe rogan
For sure.
All these gambling junkies.
jeremy jones
Unbelievable, yeah.
joe rogan
But your story about losing all the money instantaneously.
jeremy jones
100%, yeah.
A lot of people over there have gotten beat out of 10, you know.
Next day they can't play the same game because the guy went and blew the 10 in the casino.
joe rogan
I heard a story about Alex Paguline winning a tournament and then flipping a coin for the winnings and losing.
jeremy jones
I don't know.
I watched him flip one for ten at Griff's.
joe rogan
Yeah?
jeremy jones
Yeah.
He lost that one.
Now, that's an adrenaline rush.
I've never bet ten.
I've bet five on a coin toss.
joe rogan
Have you really?
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, my God.
Did you win?
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Did you keep going?
jeremy jones
No, and the guy never looked at the coin the guy I was gambling with in Houston.
joe rogan
What?
jamie vernon
This is the Derby City Classic.
joe rogan
Yes.
unidentified
This is a 60 Minutes piece that was just posted three days ago.
joe rogan
Interesting.
Wow!
What are the odds?
jamie vernon
It's an interview with Shane Van Bowen.
joe rogan
Oh, right.
This is where Shane talks about it.
jeremy jones
Look at that.
joe rogan
No smoking, no gambling.
But this is in this.
jeremy jones
Shane talks about...
jamie vernon
You know who he is, right?
joe rogan
Who what is?
jeremy jones
The big guy that was shooting right there?
Right there?
joe rogan
No, who's that guy?
jeremy jones
That's Jean-Rubert Blonde, the poker player.
He's a one pocket nut.
Big action guy.
joe rogan
I saw an interview with him where they talk about how he doesn't gamble.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, you know, he plays those matches that are, of course, being bet on, and, you know, he makes money from that, but, I mean, he's not going to go around trying to, you know, pick on a game or anything like that.
joe rogan
Yeah, when you're a five-time U.S. Open winner, like, good luck.
jeremy jones
Well, you know, well, I mean, you give up the wrong game now.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's the thing.
You have to give up a crazy spot.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I'd bet on you against him, but, you know, let me make the game.
Yeah, exactly, right?
But he, you know, directed that energy towards trying to be the best in the world and, you know, it's paid off pretty well for him.
joe rogan
Yeah.
It's always, to me, fascinating to watch a person who rises above all.
Like, what are they doing different?
Like, what's going on?
How are they doing this?
So much better than everybody else.
And, you know, with him, it's just the obsessive practice and just this fucking focus that he has.
jeremy jones
Yeah, that's the one that, you know, I think any of us can practice.
And at times, I feel like his practice could be better.
And I don't mean it unfairly, meaning, like, get a little more out of it sometimes.
Like, I've seen them sit there and shoot a 900-mile-an-hour jacked-up stop shot for hours.
That's going to come up like once every year.
joe rogan
Right, the way it does.
jeremy jones
I know, I know, I know.
There's a lot to get back on.
But the thing that I was getting at is he's just a unique individual with the focus.
Like when he gets those crazy eyes, when those eyes, the oxygen starts making them, oh my God.
And I'm like, all right, we're home.
We're good.
Because if the ball's laid tough, no one's beating them.
You know, if both players get a tough layout, no one's beating them.
joe rogan
So when you are the coach of the Moscone Cup, is he the guy that you're most happy is in the clinch?
jeremy jones
Yeah, I mean, I was talking about it earlier last night with my buddies, the ones you met, and, you know, the best thing for me coming to Moscone as far as a decision is hill-hill and do I got to pick Skyler or Shane to play that hill-hill match, you know?
joe rogan
Pretty good decision.
jeremy jones
Yeah, just because, you know, you got to say Shane's probably the pick most of the time.
But, I mean, Skyler's one of those that may prove you different that week.
You know what I mean?
It may be like a no-brainer.
joe rogan
And the Moscone Cup is fascinating because they openly encourage cheering.
jeremy jones
Is that what you call it?
joe rogan
It's so wild.
jeremy jones
I'm joking, yeah.
joe rogan
Let's hear the volume on this.
Oh, that was when...
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
That's 2018 when we won after losing eight years in a row.
But...
joe rogan
So these...
jeremy jones
I don't think that...
joe rogan
Crowds, like, how are they so much different for the Moscone Cup than they were?
jeremy jones
Oh, they're singing and dancing.
Nationalistic.
Yeah, they're, you know...
joe rogan
USA versus Europe.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
It's big, you know.
I mean, all those countries...
They're big on that.
Soccer fans are just freaking crazy.
joe rogan
They're nasty at times.
Is that better?
Would that make it more exciting if people cheered in between shots but didn't do it at all while the guy's down on the ball?
Because it seems like they're good at that.
jeremy jones
Well, they somewhat get almost settled, you know.
Occasionally you still have something peep out.
joe rogan
You're settled down.
Settle down to the referee.
jeremy jones
Well, York Hall, the first place, it was a small venue, only 600 is when I started.
Now that one had like 3,000, I think, right on top of you.
You know what I mean?
Right on top of you.
You can feel everyone's energy.
But York Hall, they used to have like laser pointers, the crowd did, and they'd point at the nine ball while we were shooting.
I mean, they were ruthless.
Yeah, because they had two sessions, a noon and a six.
So they start drinking about 1130. Well, by the time the six o'clock come, there were fights every time.
I mean, it was unbelievable.
Yeah.
I mean, but amongst friends that came together, you know what I mean?
Like, those English are, ooh.
joe rogan
But it's so much different than any other pool tournament.
And one of the things I was thinking was, Jamie and I, Jamie showed me that golf tournament where they play in front of a giant audience.
jeremy jones
In Phoenix, you mean?
joe rogan
Yeah.
I'm like, that's amazing!
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Like, that's, what a great idea, where everybody's cheering and screaming.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
And maybe that's a thing that, like, with the Moscone Cup, If you had a high-stakes game like that, where people in the audience reacted like that, maybe that would get more people engaged.
jeremy jones
Well, I think that, but the thing with the long ones, man, they just play too long races.
A race to 100?
I mean, come on, let's cut it up and do three out of five races, like nine or something.
You know, something that's going to keep your attraction.
joe rogan
You mean if people want to watch it?
jeremy jones
Yeah, and you know, the big nine-mile tournaments now, you know, the ones I've been traveling for and working, The fans are getting like the Moscone every time they're getting closer and closer.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, real smart fans, real energetic.
I mean, going crazy, singing in between games.
unidentified
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, it's getting better, yeah.
joe rogan
Interesting.
So is that encouraged?
jeremy jones
Heck yeah.
joe rogan
So you want people to be more engaged.
Of course, it was always very quiet.
jeremy jones
Well, the thing is the players are loosening up a little more.
So, you know, the fans are going to follow what the players do.
They want to engage with the players.
unidentified
Right.
jeremy jones
So, like at the Moscone, you see Jason Shaw getting them going and whatnot, you know, and we get them going as well.
And that's starting to happen a little more on the regular tour now to where the players are starting to engage with the fans more.
joe rogan
Interesting.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, that might be a thing that helps a lot.
But it is nice to see all the streaming and Matchroom and the Predator series and all these different things that are happening.
jeremy jones
So much pool, right?
joe rogan
So much pool.
It's all over the place.
jeremy jones
And there's some dollars out now.
I mean, you know.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
And even like the regional ones, right?
Like, Texas Open, it's not considered a pro-pro on the calendar tournament, but you know it's pro-quality, right?
The great players.
But I mean, this event has gone from 15,000 added, maybe 20 to like almost 50 now.
Wow.
Yeah, I mean, everything's going up.
unidentified
That's great.
jeremy jones
So it's good, yeah.
Makes it easier.
joe rogan
It's great for the game.
jeremy jones
Heck yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, I'm always trying to encourage more people to play it.
I just want it to be more popular.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Well, you fall serious into it pretty quick.
Once you get down on the ball, I can tell it comes pretty serious.
joe rogan
I just don't have enough time.
If I had more time, I could play better.
And I work out too much, and lifting weights is literally the enemy of pool.
Because your arm is not communicating with fine motor skills that well.
It stiffens everything up.
So it takes hours for me to get loosened up.
And then I have to stop.
jeremy jones
A couple times I got broke.
Not broke, but I lost when I shouldn't have.
I went bowling.
And I didn't bowl hardly ever.
So I went bowling the night before.
I ended up playing the next day.
Just like three or four games of bowling.
A little 16-pound ball.
Ain't nothing to it.
But I couldn't draw my cue ball.
unidentified
Oh, wow.
jeremy jones
This little muscle right here, the one on top, it wouldn't keep going.
It would kind of swing and quit.
Swing and quit.
It was unbelievable.
And the same thing with darts, believe it or not.
You play darts for a bunch of...
Yeah, exactly.
joe rogan
Yeah, that makes sense.
jeremy jones
It just messes up that little sensation you want.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, I always found the worst was curls.
unidentified
When you did curls, you just couldn't play.
jeremy jones
No feel.
joe rogan
Just nothing.
Just numb and stupid.
Willie Hoppy apparently wouldn't even drive his car when he had to play.
jeremy jones
Willie Hoppy?
I wish I would have met him.
The ones say he was a character.
Of course, all the old guys were.
joe rogan
They had to be.
jeremy jones
Fats was like, everyone loved him.
joe rogan
We read a statistic once that at the turn of the century, New York had something like 900 pool halls.
jeremy jones
Wow.
joe rogan
See if that's true.
In 1900, I think in the 1900, New York had some absurd number of pool halls.
jeremy jones
Wow.
Well, Houston had a ton of them whenever I played.
joe rogan
900 sounds nuts.
jeremy jones
No, you're talking about the state of New York?
joe rogan
No, I mean the city of New York.
jeremy jones
Wow.
joe rogan
That might not be true.
jeremy jones
Yeah, because I think Houston had one of the most back in like the 90s.
joe rogan
This was in like the 1900s.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah, I see what you're saying.
joe rogan
This was like the early 1900s.
jeremy jones
Well, Houston was so great because it was like going on the road yourself.
Every pool room had their own little champion.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah, their own little pool nut guys, pool groupie kind of guys.
So you could go from pool hall to pool hall and really just play your heart out.
joe rogan
Do you miss those days of doing that?
jeremy jones
Absolutely.
Absolutely, yeah.
joe rogan
Because I see it in your eyes when you talk about it.
Your eyes twinkle.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Okay, look at this.
Okay, I'm wrong.
jeremy jones
117. That's still incredible.
joe rogan
Why did I think it was 900?
Because I exaggerate everything.
The game was legalized in 1904. By 1935, there was 117 pool halls in the city.
That is pretty nuts, though, still.
jeremy jones
Well, it's amazing because during Prohibition that, you know, 117 pool halls in one city.
Well, you know they end up taking them out, right?
And that one thing that happened during Prohibition, I think, is anything to do with any kind of gaming that promoted in some areas.
I think New York was one of them.
Really?
Yeah, jukeboxes end up going away.
That's interesting.
I think pool tables end up going away until the end of Prohibition.
joe rogan
The number of licensed pool halls has grown to 169 from 140 in Los Angeles, where alcohol and food are permitted.
The number of licensed pool halls has grown from 169 to from 140 five years ago.
So they had 169 pool halls at what time?
jamie vernon
This was 1987. Really?
jeremy jones
Right after the color of money.
joe rogan
Right after the color of money.
That makes sense.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Wow.
unidentified
11,000 in the last two years.
jamie vernon
Manhattan has two pool halls to survive.
unidentified
Wow.
jamie vernon
Membership in the Iowa City-based Billiard Congress of America.
Okay, that's what it was.
joe rogan
Okay.
jeremy jones
Interesting.
Yeah, there's pool rooms everywhere.
joe rogan
That's right after the movie.
Oh, look, the newer movies caused a maxi-resurgence in the game.
Wow.
Yeah, I mean, I remember watching it being fascinated.
That was before I was really playing.
Going, wow.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I didn't watch it and then play.
I actually was, that was 86, I think it came out.
joe rogan
I think so.
jeremy jones
Yeah, 86. I started in 88. So I played about three or four months before I got turned on to that movie.
And I was like, oh, okay.
Which, Paul Newman's my favorite anyways.
My favorite actor.
That was his first Oscar, you know that?
joe rogan
Executive Billiards, where I used to play, they had a VHS player.
And they played the Hustler all the time.
All the time.
To the point where everybody in the pool hall could say the words.
They knew it.
They knew every line.
jeremy jones
Great movie.
It's a sad story, though.
Unbelievable.
joe rogan
It's a fucking bummer, man.
They made some bummer movies back then.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Well, big parts of it would be so sad.
You know, it had great highs, right?
I mean, like when he's beating Fats, but then you just know what's coming, and it's just from there, about the next hour of the movie, he's just like tearjerker.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Another thing that was amazing about that movie is how good Jackie Gleason played.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Jackie Gleason could really play.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
The difference between watching a guy like Tom Cruise or watching a guy like Paul Newman.
Tom Cruise was better than Paul Newman, but...
Jackie Gleason looked like a real player.
jeremy jones
Yeah, it wasn't painful to watch.
joe rogan
No.
jeremy jones
Not at all.
joe rogan
It wasn't like lifting the cue up with every shot.
There's some scenes with Newman where you gotta reshoot that.
Don't do that.
Don't lift the cue up as you're shooting.
That's ridiculous.
jeremy jones
Yeah, when he's breaking the balls in that one scene, I think it comes up.
joe rogan
Well, he shot a ball with follow and lifted the cue up at the same time.
Stay down.
Stay down.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Great actor, though, but all his shots were kind of like trick shots.
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
A little more, you know.
joe rogan
They looked okay.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
It looked okay.
It wasn't offensive, you know?
jeremy jones
No, no, no.
joe rogan
But Jackie Gleason looked like a player.
unidentified
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
The way he would stroke the ball, like, wow.
And you could see him making break shots.
Like, you see his whole body.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah, moving the cue ball and all that.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah.
jeremy jones
Well, they say he was a rack boy, I think, at one time as a kid and then just was a real character, like a pool hole kind of guy.
joe rogan
Makes sense.
jeremy jones
Yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure.
All his roles he kind of played, not later in his years, but the Honeymooners and whatnot, seemed like the kind of guy that could fit in the pool hall pretty well.
Again, a lot of charisma.
joe rogan
It's just interesting that that one movie, which was like this massive movie where he plays a serious character, and it's not funny at all.
jeremy jones
Oh, no.
joe rogan
You would never even imagine that that's the same guy from The Honeymooners.
jeremy jones
I know.
joe rogan
You know?
jeremy jones
Yeah, because he hardly ever smiles in the entire movie in The Hustler.
I don't know if he ever did.
joe rogan
Nope.
He's just a no-nonsense killer.
jeremy jones
Yeah, and what was the...
God, he's one of my favorite actors, too.
The guy that played his steak horse.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's great.
jeremy jones
I'll think of it in a second.
joe rogan
God damn it.
jeremy jones
I know.
joe rogan
It's on the tip of my tongue.
George C. Scott.
jeremy jones
That's right.
My brother would be hot at me if I didn't remember that name.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, my God.
He was phenomenal.
jeremy jones
He was great.
joe rogan
And Piper Laurie.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
She was phenomenal in that, too.
jeremy jones
The whole movie.
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's an amazing movie.
It holds up, too.
It's one of those movies that really holds up.
You go back and watch it, and you go...
Man.
And then the style of film they did back there was more quiet.
There wasn't music playing at every moment that told you how to think.
You know, the movie played itself out.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, the scenes, the setting told you a ton about what was going on.
You know, like in the pool hall in Ames, I guess it was.
Was it Ames?
joe rogan
This is Ames, mister.
jeremy jones
Yeah, exactly.
And it didn't take a whole lot of words to get the feeling of what, you know, everyone was about in the movie.
Which I thought they did pretty well at that in The Color of Money as well.
You know what I'm saying, for the most part?
joe rogan
Yeah, for the most part.
jeremy jones
Because you could say not many had a lot of lines besides Tom, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, I think is who it was, and Paul Newman.
Everyone else was just bits and pieces.
joe rogan
But it did capture the feeling that you get from that.
I wonder how many people became pool hustlers after The Hustler.
How many people saw that movie?
Because back then, they didn't have very many movies.
jeremy jones
Oh, no.
Those were two of the biggest, right?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
I wonder how many people.
That probably caused a resurgence in 1963 as well.
jeremy jones
I would say so.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
100%.
Yeah.
I think it did pretty well overall.
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
It was a huge movie.
Did it win anything?
Who gives a shit about those things?
jeremy jones
You know, like I was saying, I think The Color of Money is actually Paul Newman's first Oscar win.
joe rogan
Really?
jeremy jones
Yeah.
He got nominated a few times but never actually won it.
jamie vernon
At least I should check The Hustler first.
Right.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jamie vernon
Best Cinematography, Best Art Direction, Best Actress, Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay.
joe rogan
Wow.
Won everything.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
unidentified
Jesus.
joe rogan
Holy shit.
jeremy jones
Yeah, I wonder who won Best Actor that year besides Paul Newman.
joe rogan
Yeah, I think that was the thing about The Color of Money, like they had to give it to him because he hadn't won it yet.
jeremy jones
Yeah, maybe.
He was good in it, though.
joe rogan
Oh, he's phenomenal in it.
jeremy jones
Yeah, he was really good.
joe rogan
It's a great movie.
jeremy jones
John Totoro is one of my favorites, too, by the way.
joe rogan
Yeah, but I just love movies that, you know, it's not offensive.
It, like, really does capture what it's like in these places.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you know.
jamie vernon
Let me correct that.
It was nominated for most of those I just said.
unidentified
Oh!
joe rogan
Which ones did it win?
jamie vernon
It won Art Direction Cinematography.
joe rogan
Oh.
Damn it.
jeremy jones
Well, still a little bit of what we talked about, though.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
For the most part.
joe rogan
Exactly.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Art Direction Cinematography were so important in that movie.
That place Ames, if that doesn't exist, someone needs to build it.
jeremy jones
I think it did, though, right?
joe rogan
Did it exist?
jeremy jones
I think it did.
Not anymore, but I think...
joe rogan
Probably they filmed in a pool hall.
They wouldn't set up a new pool hall.
jeremy jones
No, I think it did.
In fact...
Maybe it's in another book or something to do with Poole, I think, and then it's quoted from that movie.
joe rogan
What was the name of the original place?
Do you know?
What was it really called?
jamie vernon
McGurr's and Ames.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
jamie vernon
Two places that were defunct, it says.
joe rogan
They were defunct before?
jamie vernon
Yes, and much of the action was filmed at now defunct Poole Hall, so I guess I don't know whenever they're writing now, if it was the time they were writing it or the time that they were shooting it.
It says McGur's and Ames Billiard Academy is where they shot it.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
I think those are real places.
joe rogan
That's Color of Money or The Hustler?
jeremy jones
The Hustler, yeah.
joe rogan
Interesting.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
I think now the one that I didn't like in The Color of Money is whenever the two men and a stranger.
Oh, yeah.
That doesn't really happen.
You're trying to get someone in real trouble with something like that.
But a lot of that other stuff, though, yeah.
Kind of like I said earlier with Shamat, I just kind of wanted to see him play.
Because I knew it wasn't going to end up for 200. Even if we didn't play, that was just going to be it.
You know what I mean?
But it wasn't going to be any real action for 200. So let me just kind of evaluate him.
joe rogan
Yeah.
jeremy jones
You can kind of see that in The Color of Money when he's figuring out the right way to do it, how Paul's teaching him.
And he's handing over small bankrolls, but then getting bigger bankrolls in return when he wins.
You know what I mean?
So that kind of stuff happened a lot, actually.
joe rogan
I love the Forrest Whitaker scene.
jeremy jones
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Can I ask you a question?
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Do you think I should lose weight?
unidentified
Yeah.
jeremy jones
That was a big dig, though.
Big dig.
But another good one, Forrest Whitaker.
He actually looked like he had a little stroke.
joe rogan
Yeah.
A little something.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, he could play a little.
jeremy jones
Yeah.
There's quite a few out there that like the game.
joe rogan
Well, didn't Mike Siegel coach them?
jeremy jones
Oh, I wouldn't doubt that.
joe rogan
I know he coached Tom Cruise.
jeremy jones
Tom Cruise, yeah.
There were a few of them around.
A guy I worked with last night.
joe rogan
What do you got, Jamie?
jamie vernon
Yeah, you're right.
I'm looking at it right now.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
jeremy jones
Yeah, Larry Schwartz, a guy from Chicago.
You may have heard of him.
He worked on that, and it was in that movie as well.
I did commentary with him last night, as a matter of fact.
joe rogan
Well, my big fear is that the game will somehow or another slide away.
It doesn't seem like that's...
I was worried about that for a while.
jeremy jones
Yeah, absolutely.
joe rogan
But it doesn't seem like that's happening anymore.
Now there's an international resurgence.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, the amateur side, league pool, you know, there's so many, right?
And the consumer market's so good right now.
I think it's just going to go up and up.
joe rogan
Yeah, I hope so.
I think so, too.
And maybe a solid documentary in the Derby City or something.
unidentified
There you go.
joe rogan
We've talked about doing stuff in here, about having challenge matches in here and streaming them.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
And I would do commentary.
jeremy jones
Hell yeah.
joe rogan
So, that's still on the table.
jeremy jones
Yeah, there you go.
joe rogan
I just have to find some time.
jeremy jones
Yeah, well, you know a commentator.
joe rogan
I do.
I know the best.
He's right here.
jeremy jones
As long as it's pool.
joe rogan
Yeah, dude.
jeremy jones
Pool, baseball.
I could do a little baseball, maybe a little golf.
That's about it.
joe rogan
Well, pool, you're the man.
jeremy jones
Yeah, pool.
joe rogan
But thank you, Jeremy.
Thanks for being here.
jeremy jones
I appreciate it.
joe rogan
It was a lot of fun.
jeremy jones
Absolutely.
unidentified
All right.
joe rogan
Let's go play some pool.
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