Golf Players

10-Ball – JOSHUA FILLER vs ALEX PAGULAYAN – 2023 International Open Big Foot Challenge



Another first round match from the 2023 International Open Big Foot Challenge with two multi time Champions competing on the Diamond 10’ table.

“The Lion” is a crowd favorite and both US Open 9-Ball and World 9-Ball titles on his resume. He was inducted into the BCA Hall of Fame in 2019.

“The Killer” Joshua Filler has also won both the US Open 9-Ball and World 9-Ball Championships in his short career.

Mark Wilson and Kim Davenport provide the commentary.

– – – – – – – – – –

You can watch matches from the 2018 – 2022 INTL 9-BALL OPEN and 2016-2022 Derby City Classic, 2015-2017 US Open 9-Ball, as well as other Accu-Stats Invitationals on Accu-Stats YouTube Members service: https://www.youtube.com/@AccuStats/join

Website: http://www.accu-stats.com
Members Only Program: https://www.youtube.com/@AccuStats/join
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/accustats/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/accustatspool
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/accu_stats_…
Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/ondemand/asvod/
International Open Website: https://www.intlopen.com
Roku Channel Name: ACCUSTATS

©2023 Accu-Stats Video Productions

#accustats #billiards

6 Comments

  1. I know what Davenport meant about "off the point". Efren did that once in an impossible position. It is possible. Efren proved it. Check it out sometime

  2. Actually, my recollection differs from Mark's regarding Filler's speed at the table. Only a few years ago I couldn't watch Filler for all his up and down, walking around, taking forever to shoot. Now, however, he's able to see the layout almost automatically regarding position and no longer does the bippidity boppity physical sighting routine. It's pure muscle memory now. Closer to how Earl Strickland's fast pace is famous for. In other words, not as annoying as it was. I don't recall ever seeing the Pearl doing that double think on every shot. I think part of that early up and down walk around stuff might have been influenced by the German trainings, but a little bit of Efren's incomparable calculations, pointing at spots or rail points and the potential tangent contacts of either cue ball or object ball. Though Efren's pre-shot routine was never tedious.

Write A Comment