STRICKLAND GUNNING FOR TITLE
Mike Panozzo
Friday, July 7, 6:32
PM
CST
Earl Strickland, who won
back-to-back WPA world 9-ball titles in the early 90s, moved a
step closer to reclaiming that crown with a convincing 11-4 win
over Japan's Akikimo Toshikawa Friday afternoon in Cardiff, Wales.
With the win, Strickland advanced to the Elite Eight at the Victor
Chandler World Pool Championship, where he will meet Rudolfo Luat,
the unlikely lone remaining player from the Philippines Saturday
afternoon."I was much more comfortable today," said
Strickland, who nonetheless still found time to joust with what he
perceived to be an overly talkative crowd. "I'm carrying the
flag for the U.S."
Luat, who has outlasted his more
popular countrymen Efren Reyes, Francisco Bustamante and Leonardo
Andam, defeated Chin-Shun Yang of Taiwan, 11-6.In other Sweet 16
action on Friday, Denmark's Peter Nielsen held of the comeback
efforts of American Allen Hopkins, 11-8. Nielsen, the no. 26 seed,
forged a 6-1 lead, before Hopkins mounted his charge. Also,
22-year-old Melbourne, native Johl Younger, became the first
Australian ever to reach the Elite Eight with a surprising 11-7
win over Finland's Mika Immonen, the event's no. 19 seed. Mexico's
50-year-old Ismael "Morro" Paez, the renowned West Coast
money player, ran the final four racks to stop young Canadian Alex
Pagulyan, 11-8.
The afternoon's most interesting
match featured 1996 WPA champion Fong Pang Chao edging 1995
champion Oliver Ortmann of Germany, 11-9. The match featured
controversy, as Ortmann accused the Taiwanese champion of
intentionally moving in Ortmann's line while the German took aim
at a game-clinching 9-ball. Chao, through an interpreter brought
in by the head referee, was warned about his actions, but that
didn't save a bitter Ortmann from coming up short in his drive for
the $60,000 top prize in the $250,000 event.
The evening's feature match -
English snooker hero Steve Davis facing his third straight former
world champion, Kunihiko Takahashi of Japan.
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