


Travis Geurra, who’d lost his opening-round match (double hill) to Ulissis Reyes, was playing his 5 th loss-side match, downed Joey Tate’s younger sister, Bethany 5-2 (she earned $50 as the event’s top finishing female/junior). One made it out of those 9/12 matches and advanced to Sunday’s first money-round. On the loss side, the 9/12 races ended the event’s Saturday and featured both of the competitors who’d been present in 2013. With Tate racing to 9, Clark survived the hot seat match 8-8. Tate defeated Summerlin 9-4 (Summerlin racing to 5), as Clark, in a straight-up race to 8, sent Bolton to the loss side 8-7. Joey Tate squared off against Travis Summerlin in the other one. It might have been nine of the last 14 matches, but at the end, Clint Clark and Joey Tate opted out of playing a final, which awarded the undefeated occupant of the hot seat at the time (Clark) the official event title.Ĭlark, looking for his second tour win of the year, having chalked up his first in July, advanced through the field to face Mark Bolton in one of the winners’ side semifinals. It proved to be a very competitive weekend, as eight of the final 14 matches went double hill, including both winners’ side semifinals, the hot seat match, the quarter and semifinals. In attendance were two competitors who’d been present at the 2013 tour debut (Tim Krzwicki, Travis Guerra) and a pair that were still in grammar school at the time (Joey and Bethany Tate). The tour, which began on January 11, 2013, chalked up its 500 th tour stop at an appropriately-financed $500-added event that drew 52 entrants to Breaktime Billiards in Winston-Salem, NC. The ’s Q City 9-Ball Tour reached a significant milestone in its history this past Labor Day weekend (Sept.

Rumor has it that there was going to be a cake, though concerns about too many candles in a pool hall put that idea to rest.
