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View all search resultsEfren Reyes
Efren Reyes. (AFP)
Few sportspeople have perfected their craft like Efren Reyes, but the one-time king of pool admits age is catching up with him as he finally yields to younger talent.
The 60-year-old Filipino says neck pain, his eyes and even the strength of his arms can betray him in long matches, and he is weary after losing to wave after wave of hotshots.
"That's a long time ago," he said at the Southeast Asian (SEA) Games, when reminded of his heyday when he hoarded world titles and was widely regarded as the globe's finest player.
"At this time there's a lot of good players from the Philippines. Everybody can beat me."
Reyes shuffled out of Singapore's SEA Games in the semi-finals of one-cushion carom, an obscure, delicate game in which the Philippines has few players.
Two competitors must use their cue-ball to hit the only two other balls on a pocketless table, scoring one point for each successful shot. The winner is the first to 100.
Reyes' vision and shot-making came to the fore as he clawed back from 80-56 down to level at 84-all, before a lapse in concentration allowed his opponent back to the table.
And Vietnam's Ma Minh Cam, wearing a distinctive blue glove on his bridge hand to ease friction, seized victory with a 16 break on his next visit.
Afterwards Reyes, wearing a crumpled, dark blue waistcoat and a resigned expression, rued the mistake which consigned him to his third SEA Games bronze in the little-known sport.
"I missed an easy shot, if I hadn't missed that maybe I would have won that game," he said.
His chief role in the multi-sport SEA Games was as practice partner for Filipino pool players, he says, much like his usual routine in his home country.
Reyes, who has shifted out of the capital Manila back to his home province of Pampanga, is regularly invited to "money games" where players and gamblers will bet cash.
It's very much back to his roots in the sport, where he played in his uncle's "Lucky 13" pool hall from the age of eight, rising from money games to tournaments to hustling in the United States.
Finally he reached pool's nascent world stage, where his battles with Earl "The Pearl" Strickland and others were broadcast around the globe, becoming minor classics.
"We always are playing pool every day. We play money games of pool, that's our practice," he said.
"In the Philippines, good players always call me to play them. Every province, not only Manila. Everywhere in the Philippines. Even the young up-and-coming players.
"If I come, they pay me and they make extra on betting. For me, I don't bet but other people bet on me."(+++)
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