![]() ![]() Please declare your traffic by updating your user agent to include company specific information.įor best practices on efficiently downloading information from SEC.gov, including the latest EDGAR filings, visit sec.gov/developer. Your request has been identified as part of a network of automated tools outside of the acceptable policy and will be managed until action is taken to declare your traffic. To allow for equitable access to all users, SEC reserves the right to limit requests originating from undeclared automated tools. She meant to continue her evening, but, ironically, fell asleep.Your Request Originates from an Undeclared Automated Tool Meanwhile, Campos had a quick celebratory drink with friends at the Riviera's Splash Bar and then headed upstairs to call her parents. Coming from the one-loss side, Rakin and Mazaika pulled off a 4-3 victory in the first set, but lost a hill-hill heartbreaker in the second. She hung tough after her defeat to Campos, but the division-winning match went to Michael and Susan Williams of Chandler, Ariz. Rakin went immediately to the final of the Scotch Doubles Open division with partner Colin Mazaika. "Mary came over and gave me a hug she was a great sport," Campos said. After the winning 8 ball rimmed out for Rakin, Campos cleared her last two balls and was straight-in on the 8. Campos returned the favor, setting up a hill-hill game. Tied at 2-2 in the race-to-4, Rakin broke and ran out. Rakin forced a deciding set, which went down to the wire. ![]() It was a compelling pairing - semi-celebrity Rakin against Campos, confined to a wheelchair due to a lifelong muscular malady. ![]() the winner of the 20 World Junior Championships. There she met teenager Rakin of Daly City, Calif. Once Campos had broken into the top 16, "I breathed a big sigh of relief, because I had done what I set out to do," she said. The real crowd-pleaser of the day - and the match people would still be chatting about days later - was the Women's Open Singles final between Campos and Rakin. I got second-place here two years ago in the Open." I've been playing in tournaments since I was 8. But I got better than him when I was, like, 6. "I've been playing since I was 5," he said. "He ran away from me, and that's how it goes."ĭespite not even being old enough for a celebratory cocktail, Bergman didn't get to the winner's circle on luck. "I didn't break good, he did," Boucher said. Hot-seat dweller Bergman won the match, 7-3, while Boucher walked away shaking his head. With spiky blonde hair, an enormous polo shirt and a habit of applying extra flourish to his windup stroke, Bergman was a stark contrast to the black-clad, no-nonsense, Diet Coke-swilling Boucher. One table over, the Men's Master Singles final was in full swing, as Jeff Boucher faced off against 20-year-old Justin Bergman. But Harper would leave with first place and $3,000. "What do you think?" Goettlicher smirked back, as the 12 bounced off the rail and clacked neatly into the pocket. After Harp feigned playing his pool cue like a guitar, he grinned as his opponent surveyed the table. One audience member watched him intently, murmuring, "I took a class with him about three years ago - it was amazing." The between-shots banter between the competitors was nearly as entertaining as their game. Goettlicher wore a shirt with the logo of his Houston-area billiards academy. The Men's Super Senior Singles division was a good-natured contest between two old lions: Donald Harp and master-level pool instructor Randy Goettlicher. "We got a pretty good team, so we're hoping to win that one too," Barnes said of the Men's/Mixed Open Team division. "We've got a team event starting tomorrow," he explained, as a group of guys that looked like the Beastie Boys or the cast of "Entourage" loomed over his shoulders. It wasn't quite time for a victory lap yet. "I just keep my eyes on winning, grind it out, stay in there and keep myself focused," he said. He seemed remarkably calm for a man who'd just beaten out about 1,500 division-mates ("One thousand, four hundred and eighty-six, exactly," he said) for $11,000. A crowd stood on chairs for a better view as Barnes pulled away for victory. Despite his position in the hot-seat, Barnes, 23, watched every roll with a furrowed brow and lined up his shots with the grave expression of a man defusing a bomb. Kirby had a dispassionate, poker-player's gaze as he sized up the table for his runouts. The first singles championship match pitted Danny Barnes of Monroe, Mich., against Samuel Kirby in the Men's Open Singles division. Current Issue Previous Page Next Pageīarnes played some mean 8-ball, taking titles in singles and team divisions. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |