The Derby City Classic is an annual pool convention and tournament held every January at the Caesars Southern Indiana casino in Elizabeth, Indiana, near Louisville, Kentucky.[1] It is eight days long and offers various disciplines of competition for pool players of all caliber.[2] It is often referred to as the DCC.

History

edit

The annual convention has been in existence since 1997. Diamond Billiard Products,[3] is the title sponsor of the event, and the lead tournament promoter is Greg Sullivan. Over $100,000 is added to the tournament payouts. Sullivan was inspired to create the DCC by the Johnston City Classic, a former all-around tournament held in Johnston City, Illinois and first organized in 1961 with the purpose of bringing America's top pool gamblers together.[1]

During the eight-day-long convention, competition is held consecutively in three major disciplines, bank pool, nine-ball, and one-pocket. According to Sullivan, "I made it where you're a sucker if you didn't enter."[1] All tournaments are "buyback" competitions in which players can buy their way back in after being first eliminated; matches are races to three sets, much shorter than standard matches; and the entry fee for a tournament is less than that for a spectator's ticket.[1] An All-Around Champion title is awarded each year to an individual player who participates in all three disciplines, and is determined by an ascending point scale and high quality of play, with a prize of $20,000.

The late "St. Louis" Louie Roberts, a legendary American player known for an entertaining style of play and high-stakes gambling action, is memorialized by the annual Louie Roberts A&E Award, which stands for "action and entertainment". Attendees of the event vote, and the pool player who displays the most action and entertainment a la Roberts each year wins the award and is thereafter granted lifetime free entry to the Derby City Classic, including a free room at the Horseshoe's hotel during the event.[1] The title was awarded by the DCC from 2003 until 2014, and although it continued in 2015 and 2016 (via fans and not associated with the DCC), it officially stopped being awarded in 2017.[4]

There are also smaller age-restricted competitions for under-16, over-21, over-62, and over-70 divisions, as well as a ladies-only tournament held. Pool industry members bring their wares to the DCC and set up vendor booths, providing a billiard expo for attendees. The vendor booths display a large variety of cue sticks, pool paraphernalia, billiard clothing, books, and instructional DVDs.

To commemorate the great one-pocket champions, OnePocket.org, a website dedicated to the discipline, hosts an annual dinner gala at the Derby City Classic and inducts two people each year into the One Pocket Hall of Fame.[5]

Since 2004, A Bank pool ring game event founded by the late Grady Mathews has been held, which consists of six players, who post an entry fee with a winner take all prize.[6]

In 2007, a straight pool competition began where players are given an assigned number of chances to make a high run. The players with the 8 highest runs will qualify into a single elimination tournament where every match is race-to-125 points. In 2020 the straight pool competition had been cancelled due to schedule interference with other events and competitions.

Winners

edit

Main events

edit

Several Hundreds of players each year participate in the open Bank pool, One pocket and Nine-ball events to get opportunity to win the overall title of $20,000 cash prize and to be awarded the prestigious title of "Master of the Table." It is possible for a player to win the "Master of the Table" title without winning any of the three competitions.

Year Nine-ball Bank pool One pocket Overall
1999   Troy Frank   Nick Varner   Efren Reyes   Efren Reyes
2000   George SanSouci   Shannon Daulton   Nick Varner   Dee Adkins
2001   Shannon Daulton   Jose Parica   Buddy Hall   Shannon Daulton
2002   Mika Immonen   Larry Price   Cliff Joyner   Jose Parica
2003   Shannon Daulton (2)   Danny Harriman   Jose Parica   Larry Nevel
2004   Ralf Souquet   Jason Miller   Efren Reyes (2)   Efren Reyes (2)
2005   Efren Reyes   David Matlock   Efren Reyes (3)   Efren Reyes (3)
2006   Ralf Souquet (2)   Jason Miller (2)   Efren Reyes (4)   Jason Miller
2007   Niels Feijen   Stevie Moore   Efren Reyes (5)   Efren Reyes (4)
2008   Ralf Souquet (3)   Larry Price (2)   Gabe Owen   Francisco Bustamante
2009   Shane Van Boening   John Brumback   John Schmidt   John Brumback
2010   Efren Reyes (2)   John Brumback (2)   Scott Frost   Efren Reyes (5)
2011   Dennis Orcollo   Alex Pagulayan   Shane Van Boening   Shane Van Boening
2012   Shane Van Boening (2)   John Morra   Shane Van Boening (2)   Shane Van Boening (2)
2013   Alex Pagulayan   Francisco Bustamante   Corey Deuel   Francisco Bustamante (2)
2014   Shane Van Boening (3)   Dennis Orcollo   Efren Reyes (6)   Dennis Orcollo
2015   Warren Kiamco   Shannon Daulton (2)   Alex Pagulayan   Alex Pagulayan
2016   Shane Van Boening (4)   John Brumback (3)   Alex Pagulayan (2)   Alex Pagulayan (2)
2017   Dennis Orcollo (2)   Francisco Bustamante (2)   Billy Thorpe   Dennis Orcollo (2)
2018   Chris Melling   Corey Deuel   Francisco Bustamante   Francisco Bustamante (3)
2019   Skyler Woodward   Billy Thorpe   Francisco Bustamante (2)   Skyler Woodward
2020   Lee Vann Corteza   Dennis Orcollo (2)   Billy Thorpe (2)   Dennis Orcollo (3)
2021 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2022   Francisco Sanchez Ruiz   Fedor Gorst   Fedor Gorst   Fedor Gorst
2023   Fedor Gorst   Fedor Gorst (2)   Tony Chohan   Fedor Gorst (2)
2024   Joshua Filler   Joshua Filler   Fedor Gorst (2)   Joshua Filler

Top Performers

edit
Name Nationality Winner Runner-up Finals
Efren Reyes   Philippines 13 6 19
Shane Van Boening   United States 8 6 14
Francisco Bustamante   Philippines 7 4 11
Dennis Orcollo   Philippines 7 1 8
Fedor Gorst   United States 7 1 8
Alex Pagulayan   Canada 6 4 10
Shannon Daulton   United States 5 2 7
John Brumback   United States 4 5 9
Jose Parica   Philippines 3 3 6
Joshua Filler   Germany 3 2 5
Jason Miller   United States 3 1 4
Ralf Souquet   Germany 3 1 4
Billy Thorpe   United States 2 2 4
Corey Deuel   United States 2 2 4
Nick Varner   United States 2 1 3
Larry Price   United States 2 0 2
Skyler Woodward   United States 2 0 2
John Morra   Canada 1 3 4
Buddy Hall   United States 1 2 3
Larry Nevel   United States 1 2 3
Cliff Joyner   United States 1 1 2
David Matlock   United States 1 1 2
Dee Adkins   United States 1 1 2
Gabe Owen   United States 1 1 2
Lee Van Corteza   Philippines 1 1 2
Mika Immonen   Finland 1 1 2
Niels Feijen   Netherlands 1 1 2
Scott Frost   United States 1 1 2
Stevie Moore   United States 1 1 2
Tony Chohan   United States 1 1 2
Chris Melling   England 1 0 1
Danny Harriman   United States 1 0 1
Francisco Sanchez Ruiz   Spain 1 0 1
George SanSouci   United States 1 0 1
John Schmidt   Canada 1 0 1
Troy Frank   United States 1 0 1
Warren Kiamco   Philippines 1 0 1
  • Active participants are shown in bold.
  • Only players who reached the final are included.
  • In the event of identical records, players are sorted in alphabetical order by first name.

Bigfoot Ten-ball Invitational

edit

The bigfoot ten-ball event, played on a 10ft table and is played alongside the other events, a 16 player invitational, that does not count towards the "Master of the Table" overall title.

Year Winner Runner-up
2013   Dennis Orcollo   Niels Feijen
2014   Shane Van Boening   Niels Feijen
2015   Shane Van Boening (2)   Lee Van Corteza
2016   Jayson Shaw   Shane Van Boening
2017   Jayson Shaw (2)   Alexander Kazakis
2018   Roberto Gomez   Fedor Gorst
2019   Chang Jung-lin   Joshua Filler
2020   Jayson Shaw (3)   Lee Van Corteza
2021 Not held due to the
COVID-19 pandemic
2022   Joshua Filler   Fedor Gorst
2023   Shane Van Boening (3)   Konrad Juszczyszyn
2024   Joshua Filler (2)   Lee Van Corteza

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e Hill, David (February 18, 2014). "Can't Knock the Hustle". Grantland.com. Retrieved March 6, 2014.
  2. ^ Derby City Classic, DerbyCityClassic.com, retrieved 26 May 2018
  3. ^ Diamond Billiard Products website DiamondBilliards.com, Retrieved 26 May 2018
  4. ^ "Louie Roberts Award - Final Year - AzBilliards.com". forums.azbilliards.com. 31 January 2016. Retrieved 2018-05-28.
  5. ^ "One Pocket Hall of Fame: Celebrating The Legacy of Pool in Action OnePocket.org, Retrieved 24 May 2008
  6. ^ "Van Boening Wins 10-Ball Ring Game". AZBilliards.com: The A to Z of Billiards and Pool. Avondale, AZ: AZBilliards, Inc. January 5, 2008. pp. "Independent Event" section. Archived from the original on January 7, 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-24.