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Missing articles that need to be created, that don't fall under the categories already covered at WP:CUEBIOS, WP:CUEORGS or WP:CUEEVENTS or showing up as missing game articles at the top of WP:CUETODO (or as redlinks in the game list at Cue sport). Things like films, books, equipment, companies, etc. that need entire articles (not just WP:CUEGLOSS entries) go here.

Priority should first be given to those that are the most redlinked from other articles.

Businesses edit

Companies edit

Cue manufacturers edit

Supplies manufacturers edit

Table manufacturers edit

  • Olhausen (Brunswick Corporation's main modern competitor; actually should be under official full name of company)
  • Presidential Billiards (actually a subsidiary of a more general furniture company, the lowest-cost teak supplier in the US; do article on that company, with Presidential Billiards section)
  • Master Billiards (possibly the leading mfr. in Australia; based in Sydney)

Media, publishing and promotion edit

Venues edit

Schools edit

Equipment/products edit

  • Sardo Tight Rack (high prominence in pro. tournaments, and an engineering marvel; deserves mention at Rack (billiards), and will need photos which means one of us has to buy the thing)
  • Delta-13 rack (as of 2010-2011 also has high prominence in pro tournaments; very thin - especially good for straight pool)

Media & publications edit

Draft articles (media) edit

Films edit

  • 9-ball: The Movie (still in production or possibly post-production as of October 2011)
  • Kiss Shot (1989) (Whoopie Goldberg & Dennis Franz made-for-TV movie; exists on DVD; IMDb)
  • Number One (1985 film) (and update Number One (film) dab page; Bob Geldoff & various others; made for UK TV; rarely available on VHS, and possibly only in PAL video format, no DVDs; IMDb)
  • The Baron and the Kid (1984) (Johnny & June Carter Cash, Claude Akins, and numerous pro cameos; made for TV; available on DVD; IMDb)
  • 道頓堀川(1982) (name translation needed from Japanese)
  • ナイン(2000) (name translation needed from Japanese)
  • A Game of Pool (film) a.k.a. The Pool Shark (1913) (a silent comedy short; may be the earliest known pool film, but little is known about it at IMDb; starred Edgar Kennedy, Fred Mace, Ford Sterling, and Mack Sennett who also directed and produced; redlink at some of these bio pages, and at A Game of Pool DAB page
  • Carambola (2003 film) (2003) (Spanish-language comedy about a billiard hall; available on DVD (w/ English subtitles); [1]; not to be confused with the two earlier westerns by this name)
  • Operación Carambola (1967) (Spanish-language, maybe or maybe not with Eng. subtitles - probably, as DVD is R1 and R4; comedy about billiards and apparently also a caper film; available on DVD [2])

Television edit

If not individually notable, start a Cue sports on television article or something.

Periodicals & websites edit

  • Billiards Digest (magazine; redlinked from Jose Parica; one of the three surviving national cue sports mags in the US)
  • Pool & Billiard Magazine (redlinked from Thorsten Hohmann; one of the three surviving national cue sports mags in the US)
  • InsidePOOL Magazine (one of the three surviving national cue sports mags in the US)
  • AzBilliards.com (the most prominent e-magazine on the topic)
  • Billiards (magazine; redlinked from Jose Parica; defunct, but once one of the two or three national cue sports mags in the US at that time)
  • American Cueist (magazine, defunct since ca. 2003; may not be notable enough for an article.)
  • Pro9.co.uk (UK-based, Europe-focused resource site that concentrates on nine-ball and "American pool" generally; tagline "The European Pool Player Resource")

Books edit

  • Daly's Billiard Book (1800s, by champion Maurice Daly (billiards player); perhaps the first mass-produced, general-audience book on the topic; should start as a section in his bio and possibly stay that way)
  • The Compleat Gamester (1674, by Charles Cotton; the earliest known written rules in English for billiards games, among many others; possibly should just be part of Cotton's article, but probably not, as it had its own lasting significance, and wasn't even attributed to Cotton until considerably later.

Fiction edit

  • Lush Life (1992 novel) (by Dallas Murphy; "Life gets 'interesting' again for Artie Deemer – introduced in Lover Man, 1987 – when he falls for pool-shark Crystal Spivey, a woman wanted by bankers, mobsters, and the CIA ..."; Atria hardcover ISBN 9780671685553, Pocket Books mass-market paperback ISBN 978-0671685560 and paperback ISBN 978-0671685560; has pool scene on cover)

Video games edit

Video game devices edit

Pinball & arcade games edit

Theatre edit

Laws edit

  • Crooks Act, Canada (upheld in Hodge v. The Queen (1883) 9 App Cas 117; repealed when?; forbade "billiards" in any public place without a liquor license)

Unusual equipment edit

Non-notable crap edit

Stuff to avoid. See also the list of non-notable games already speedied/CfD'd at bottom of WP:CUEGAMES.

  • Chalk to win (alleged academic theory, successfully AfD'd, of one "Dr. M. Lee" that putting chalk on the cue leads to a higher chance of winning, not because chalk is useful but because it just increases confidence)

False positives edit

Sources edit

  • The Literary Digest, December 28, 1935 (article "Old Game in New Dress" on World Pocket Billiards Championship, with photos of Erwin Rudolph and a very young "William" Mosconi; also mentions Frank Taberski and George Kelly (billiards player), and details that the event was broadcast on the radio; copy sold for $16 + shipping on eBay, but should be available on microfiche somewhere)
  • Playboy, March 1981 (trick shot article "Hot Shots" by Robert Byrne (author); cover feature is "Twins", rather distinctive issue and common on eBay)
  • The Girl's Home Companion (by "Mrs. Valentine", London: Frederick Warne and co, various editions, ca. 1891 to ca. 1900; presents English billiards instruction and propound that it is a good game for Victorian young ladies; see also Billiards and Snooker Bygones by Norman Clare, and Stein & Rubino's The Billiards Encyclopedia, for a number of prints featuring women playing; see also Shamos's The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of Billiards articles, e.g. "Mace", on prejudicial treatment of women in billiards since at least the 1700s.)