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ABOUT THE HOF:
The
BCA billiard hall of fame was founded in 1966 as a way to honor
outstanding billiard players as well as people who have made remarkable
contributions to the game of billiard. Up until today, 50+ people
have been induced to the billiard hall of fame, most of them in
the Greatest Player category. Please scroll down to view all current
inductees and their accomplishments.
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Ralph Greenleaf
1899 - 1950
Inducted 1966
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Fourteen-time
World Pocket Billiard Champion Ralph
greenleaf possessed all the flash and flair
of a natural showman. With his beautiful actress wife,
Princess Nai Tai Tai, the handsome Greenleaf put together
a sparkling trick-shot performance and toured the vaudeville
circuit in the 1920s and 30s. The audiences watched
him perform his spectacular shots by looking at a huge
mirror suspended on stage over the playing table. Greenleaf
won his first Pocket Billiard championship in 1919 and
his last one in 1937.
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Willie Hoppe
1887 - 1959
Inducted 1966
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Wille
Hoppe, whose brilliant career was one of
the longest in the annals of the sport, is considered
by many to be the greatest all-around billiard player
of any era. In 1906, at the tender age of 18, Hoppe
won his first world's title by defeating the renowned
French champion, Maurice Vignaux, at 18.1 Balkline in
a memorable match in Paris. He went on to win the 18.2
Balkline and Cushion Carom titles and years later, between
1936 and 1952, held the Three-Cushion title 11 times.
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Charlie Peterson
1880 - 1962
Inducted 1966
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Charlie
Peterson earned the title "Missionary of
Billiards" for his untiring efforts to promote the game
throughout the United States. In addition to being the
world's fancy-shot champion and, for years, holder of
the Red Ball title, Peterson made scores of personal
appearances at colleges and universities across the
country and was the guiding spirit of the Intercollegiate
and Boys' Clubs of America tournaments. Peterson died
at the age of 83, after a life devoted to winning friends
for the sport of billiards.
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Welker Cocran
1896 - 1959
Inducted 1967
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Welker
Cochran , a champion who trained for his
billiard matches with the same intensity as a professional
boxer, won his first of two 18.2 Balkline titles in
1927. He later went on to become the Three-Cushion champion
five times in the 1930s and 40s. Like many stars of
the sport, Cochran learned the game in his father's
billiard establishment, and he became the protigi of
Frank Gotch, the wrestler, who sent young Cochran to
Chicago to hone his playing talents.
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Alfredo DeOreo
1862 - 1948
Inducted 1967
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The
career of the distinguished Spanish champion Alredo
DeORO encompassed both Three-Cushion and
Pocket Billiards and spanned the closing decades of
the 19th century and the opening decades of the 20th.
DeOro, who served in his country's diplomatic corps,
first gained the Pocket Billiard crown in 1887. He was
to repeat the achievement 16 times in the next 25 years.
DeOro held the Three-Cushion title 10 times from 1908
through 1919. In 1934, at the age of 71, DeOro came
out of retirement for a Championship Tournament, winning
two dramatic victories from defending champion Welker
Cochran and the ultimate winner of the tournament, Johnny
Layton.
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Ben Nartzik
1895 - 1963
Inducted 1967
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Ben
Nartzik will always be remembered for his
tireless crusade to revive billiards from its severe
doldrums in the 1950s. Nartzik deserves a lion's share
of the credit for ridding the game of its "pool hall"
image and re-establishing its status as a "gentleman's
sport." Under his leadership, the BCA was able to help
both the Boys Club of America and the Association of
College Unions to organize billiard programs and run
successful annual tournaments. Nartzik recognized the
potential of the industry and bought the National Billiard
Chalk Co. of Chicago.
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Willie Mosconi
1913 - 1993
Inducted 1968
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For
most people, the name Willie
Mosconi and the sport of Pocket Billiards
are synonymous. And rightly so, since from 1940 to 1957
Mosconi had a near-stranglehold on the World Title,
winning it 15 times in that period. Born in Philadelphia
in 1913, Willie was a prodigy with the cue by the age
of seven. At 20, he embarked on a hectic cross-country
exhibition tour with his idol, Ralph Greenleaf, then
World Champ and at the height of his game. The result,
57 wins for Greenleaf, an amazing 50 wins for the young
Mosconi. One of the most astounding of Mosconi's many
records is his yet-unbroken exhibition high run of 526
balls!
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Jake
Schaefer Sr.
1855 - 1910
Inducted 1968
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Jake
Schaefer, Sr., "A player whose super-brilliance
with a billiard cue won for him the sobriquet of "Wizard".
So ran the lead of a 1909 newspaper article singing
the praises of Jake Schaefer, Sr. From the last quarter
of the 19th century through the first decade of the
20th, Schaefer, Sr. was one of the most feared names
in Balkline Billiards. Derivations of the game were
invented just to stymie his genius - all unsuccessfully.
He traveled throughout the world winning matches and
gathering fans. On March 11, 1908, though desperately
ill, he successfully defended his title in his final
match for the 18.1 championship against Willie Hoppe
by a score of 500 to 423. |
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Jake Schaefer Jr.
1894 - 1975
Inducted 1968
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Billiard
historians generally rank Jake
Schaefer, Jr. as the greatest of the American
Balkline players.
He was the world champion at 18.2 in 1921, 1925,
1926, 1927, and 1929-1933.
He held the 18.1 honors in 1926-1927 and the
28.2 title in 1937-1938.
At the 18.2 game, he holds four records which
have never been equaled in this country:
best game average, 400 (from the break); grand
average, tournament, 57.14; grand average, match, 93.25;
high run, match, 432.
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