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Jon Kucharo Breaking @ 2000 US Open (Full Speed) #2

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Uploaded by on May 29, 2007

Break#2: What would you give to be able to break this hard?

To see this in slow-motion, see:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyRG3Q9Zx8U

To see another example of Jon's break, see these:
To see another example of Jon's break, see these:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IDUfFDByvOM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yLaINwbSoJ4

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Sports

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Standard YouTube License

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All Comments (16)

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  • I played in the Open that year,and hit balls on that table before the tournament started. Anyone that thinks that table was loose is uninformed.

    The pockets were 4 1/2 out in front,close to 4 1/4 at the slate drop,with the typical hard GC facings. It was noticably tighter than a pro-cut Diamond,other than the slate not being as deep. Tommy D.

  • huge break for sure but with the table of today its better to break softer..

    the tables of that time were looser..

  • @cks119 i agree.

  • Iid rather have the cue ball in the centre of the table with a softer break.

  • wow he didnt pocket one freakin ball

  • The truth is that even though he didn't make a ball there,that hitting the balls that hard and flush is going to make a ball WAY more often than not. When you play his speed behind a break like that,you take your opponent,almost regardless of level,out of the equation. Unless he just flat misses,it's almost like playing the ghost. I watched him that week practicing,and he hit every single rack like that for 2 hours straight,and he never scratched except for other balls kicking it.

  • Any of you who know better want to play the guy $ome ;-)?

  • The ball jumping in the air that high takes a LOT of power out of the break. He could have hit them half as hard and not jumped the cue ball and gotten better results =/

  • true. :)

  • hes not hitting them at a decent speed with decent power, hes hitting them extremely hard and is following through a tremendous amount to achieve this amoutn of power. of course you dont need to do this to break relatively well.

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