Mike Massey

American pool player (born 1947) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Michael Massey (born April 9, 1947), professionally known as Mike Massey, is an American professional pool player. From 1989 to 1991 he served as a contributing editor of The Snap Magazine. Massey was born in Loudon, Tennessee,[1] and for several years lived in Chattanooga, Tennessee,[2] where he owned a pool hall. He has the nickname of "Tennessee Tarzan", but he now lives in Midway, Utah.[3]

Nickname
"Tennessee Tarzan"
Born (1947-04-09) 9 April 1947 (age 78)
Country United States
Quick facts Personal information, Nickname ...
Mike Massey
Massey setting up a trick shot
Personal information
Nickname
"Tennessee Tarzan"
Born (1947-04-09) 9 April 1947 (age 78)
Pool career
Country United States
Tournament wins
World ChampionArtistic Pool (2000, 2002, 2003, 2005)
Snooker Trickshot (1992, 1997, 2005)
Close

Massey was inducted into the Hall of Fame of the Billiard Congress of America on April 7, 2005.[4] For 2007 he was ranked as #8 in Pool & Billiard Magazine's poll of the "Fans' Top 20 Favorite Players".[5]

World Trickshot Championship

In 1991, Massey took part in the inaugural World Trickshot Championship in the United Kingdom and despite not winning the event, demonstrated his skills in a special "duel" against the former World Snooker Champion Steve Davis before a live audience, hosted by TV personality Jeremy Beadle. Massey also demonstrated his ability to impart spin onto a ball with his hand, throwing cue balls from the baulk end of the 12-foot-long snooker table, which would then curve around and travel behind the black spot to pocket (snooker term: pot) a red ball placed in front of the top righthand pocket, without the cue ball touching a cushion.[6] Massey used props and illusion as an integral part of his routine, such as two balls bonded together, magic props and card tricks. In the words of the 1991 World Trickshot Champion Terry Griffiths: "I feel quite embarrassed to have won actually; Mike Massey is miles ahead of the rest of us. I think it was maybe a touch of nerves that put him off tonight."[7] Massey would go on to win the event in later years.

Titles & achievements

Records

  • 11,230 balls pocketed in marathon shooting (24 hours)
  • 8,090 balls pocketed in marathon shooting with one arm (24 hours)
  • 330 racks of nine-ball run on live television (24 hours)[8]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI