Lépine
1297
I was confirming my impressions of the performance of a George Balabushka
I think for anyone that has played pool long enough, there is the mystery of what the Holy Grail
feels and plays like. With a cost of at minimum $15,000 for the Burton Spain blanks and Gus Szamboti blanks
and more of an average price of $25,000 for a fancy
George Balabushka cue made late in his career when George was at his best, most people will
never know what is the so called Stradivarious of the billiard world perform like?
I got my chance to try two of them and was wondering if I have the skills to leverage these unique
properties of a proper George Balabushka. And what makes a 1960s Balabushka so different from the
mass produced in Taiwan or Japan cues that a robot produces with the painted on signature of George Balabushka?
It is to all owners of handmade George Balabushka cues made in1959-1975 a real disappointment
that Peggy Mallen had bought the rights to brand her assembly line sporting goods as genuine Balabushka.
So today being Friday, I decided to play with ChatGPT and see what information it could inference from
the number of forum postings from owners of 1960s Balabushka cues.
On the other extreme of the spectrum is TAD. As I have said before, a proper TAD is an extremely hard hitting cue that feels like solid metal.