
by: Don "Cheese" Akerlow
The Billiard Congress of America (BCA) has announced that Ewa Mataya Laurance and
George Balabuska have been elected to the BCA Hall of Fame. The Induction Ceremony
was held at 7:00 p.m. on Thursday, April 1, 2004, at the Las Vegas Hilton during the
BCA Trade Expo.
Ewa Mataya Laurance - Ewa Mataya Laurance is one of the best-known and recognizable
stars in billiards. Known as "The Striking Viking", she began her career in her
native Sweden, where she captured the National 9-Ball Championship in 1980. In 1981,
she won this title again and also won the 14.1 Championship and the European 14.1
Championship. She won the World Open 9-Ball Championship in 1983 and 1984, and she
captained the winning team in the Old Milwaukee Team Cup in 1984. In 1988, Ms.
Laurance won the International 9-Ball, the World 8-Ball and the U.S. Open Women's
9-Ball Championships. She set the Women's High Run record for Straight Pool in 1988
and has held it (except for 10 minutes in 1992) since then. She also won the 1991 WPBA
National, the 1991 Women's U.S. Open 9-Ball and the 1994 WPA World 9-Ball
Championships. Ms. Laurance has made many TV appearances, written four books,
received the Billiard & Bowling Institute of America (BBIA) Industry Service award,
visited U.S. troops in Bosnia, is the only billiard player ever featured on the
cover of the New York Times Magazine and currently serves as President of the WPBA.
I would like to thank Ewa for this exclusive interview. I found her to be articulate,
professional, warm and personable.
D"C"A: You must be really excited about being inducted into the BCA Hall
of Fame.
Ewa: I am.
D"C"A: Where do you live now?
Ewa: Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. I really like the South. People are
awfully laid back and friendly down here.
D"C"A: How long have you been a member of the WPBA?
Ewa: Since 1981
D"C"A: What are your plans as president for the WPBA? Is there anything
new coming up? Any changes?
Ewa: We’re really excited … we’ve been working this whole last year. This
current board has been working real hard to get a long-term commitment from ESPN
so we have something to really work with, with our sponsors, as far as trying to
take everything to the next level, whatever that may turn out to be. Having a one
year to one year contract with ESPN kind of limits you as far as the investments
you want to make, don’t know what’s going to be around the bend. For us to be able
to get real commitments from our sponsors we obviously need to have a long-term
commitment from ESPN. We managed to get a three year commitment out of them and
just signed the contract about a month and a half ago.
We’re very excited about that. What that allowed us to do was not only to sign
long-term commitments with our sponsors – for instance Brunswick signed on as well
for three years – but it also gave our long-term planning committee a chance to
really take a look at our budget and what we can do. One of the things we’re going
to do – you’re going to see a little bit of a different face of the WPBA that we
are very excited about. We have invested in an actual set that is going to be
traveling around from event to event. Peg Ledman and her crew will be taking it
from tournament to tournament. Instead of having the Casino carpeting, for instance,
in the background of the overhead shots, we’re going to have our own carpeting
and stuff. Just to take it to another …
D"C"A: I’ve had some people when we watch it, commenting when it’s on
about the carpeting.
Ewa: And it’s just one of those things where every dollar, the ways it’s set
up, the fact that the WPBA own their own tour, we have our own contracts with
sponsors, with ESPN, etc. For every dime that we take to try to change things,
for instance, buy carpeting, surprisingly expensive both shipping and to buy it
and everything else.
D"C"A: Are you going to have the logo on there?
Ewa: We are still working on all those details. Peg Ledman is handling
that, it’s kind of a wish list that she’s trying to stretch the dollars as much
as she can. The problem is for every dime we spend on production is money taken
out of the prize fund essentially. Because the money we get in from sponsors is
spent on television production, event staging, prize fund for the players,
programs for the regional tours that we support. So it’s all one big picture.
It’s difficult to kind of delegate that money and spend it where it’s good for
players. It good for the tour, good for our sponsors, that type of thing.
D"C"A: We have the NWPA women’s tour here in the Northwest, and we’re going
to sponsor a WPBA event this summer.
Ewa: Fantastic! I’m so excited and so proud about our relationship with all the
regional tours around the country because for the WPBA with the resources we have –
granted though we are a professional association – we like to reach out to amateurs
and to juniors to give them an opportunity to join a professional tour but our
resources have always been limited already as we just talked about so for these
regional tours to get involved with us the way it’s worked out is phenomenal. We’re
helping the regional tours, the regional tours are helping the WPBA. It really
turned out to be a super relationship. We have really good people throughout the
whole country working for us.
What’s great is that you can see these women – there’s some great players coming
out of these tours, absolutely, flabbergasting how many great players there are
throughout the whole country.
D"C"A: You can almost go anywhere and find somebody that can beat you.
Ewa: Absolutely. So this is the grass roots program that we dreamt of
starting fifteen years ago that is now really starting to kick in and come to
fruition completely and it has been for a few years. I know that Vicki Pasky
back when the tour first started in ’93, the Classic Tour, was really, that was
her baby. She really wanted to have the grass roots program really working, the
regional tours, the qualifiers, and its in the middle of surpassing what we had
hope it to be. We’re really excited about it.
D"C"A: Are you still writing a column for Pool & Billiards?
Ewa: I am and I just got done with my 4th book. I did three books,
“The Complete Idiots Guide”, the biggest book that I did – they decided to do a
revision, so that’s coming out in the fall.
D"C"A: At what age did you start playing pool?
Ewa: I was 14
D"C"A: Who taught you?
Ewa: No one in particular really. I just became obsessed with it and it
was all I wanted to do. Then just by seeing, it was kind of the “sponge effect”
really. Everybody that I ran into that knew more about pool than I did, I asked
questions, I watched them play. I wanted to play against them to learn. The goal
back then when men’s and women’s tournaments were together, back then, the men
played a good couple of levels above what the women played. So I would watch the
men and constantly learn and pick up stuff every time I went to a tournament or
into a poolroom and that type of thing. And then a lot of alliances, my ex-husband
Jimmy Mataya, Bob Hunter, Mike Sigel, some of the people that have helped me out
here and there along the way.
D"C"A: When I started out myself, I did the same thing pretty much about
35 to 37 years ago was watch other people. How did they make that cue ball move?
How did they get to where they got to because it didn’t look like it should have
got there without the rails.
Did you pattern your game after anybody?
Ewa: Not really. I think that by time … No I don’t think so. The only
thing, and that was a mistake, I think the only thing I did was … I’ve always been,
since I was self-taught. I was always a very natural player, and a natural player
needs to play a lot. To be able to keep the level up, if you have a natural stroke
to stroke. Now a learned player, someone who has the perfect fundamentals like an
Allison or even Mike Sigel, the way that he approaches the table, need to practice
much less because it is much more mechanical and automatic. They do the same
thing, very repetitive type stroke. So to keep their level of play up it doesn’t
take as much as for a natural player to.
D"C"A: So basically you get in and out of rhythm easier.
Ewa: Exactly.
D"C"A: Because I’ve noticed I’m pretty much the same type of player like
that and if I don’t practice a lot, my game goes off.
Ewa: I used to watch Mike Sigel and Nick Varner, they used to travel
together all the time because Mike for awhile was on the Brunswick staff also,
and we’ve become good friends over the years and I watched the two of them and
Nick practices all the time and always has. Mike would go fishing or golfing or
find somebody to talk to. But he just has more of a technical, mechanical way of
approaching the table where Nick is a more natural player and therefore Nick
needs to play more to keep his game up. And so when I moved to Charlotte, I
started doing so many exhibitions, I’m working a lot for Brunswick, I’ve been
raising my daughter all these years, I realized I wasn’t playing as much as I
was and then Allison moved to Charlotte and I thought maybe that’s what I should
do. I should just get a little more mechanical approach to the table, so that way
I could still get away with not playing as much and at that point I changed my
game, and that was the biggest mistake I think I have ever made, because then
I’ve been confused ever since.
D"C"A: You mentioned your daughter, what is her name?
Ewa: Nikki
D"C"A: Does she play?
Ewa: Nikki, plays enough to where she has a good time at it. She beats
most of her guy friends. Her dream is to be – she’s an aspiring professional
horseback rider. She jumps horses and competes, but she’s got her mother’s genes
as far as competitiveness goes. Her trade of choice is horses as opposed to pool.
D"C"A: You were mentioning that you were doing your exhibitions for
Brunswick, you’d come out to Portland, at the Pavilion there, sponsored by
Apollo Pools. Terry’s a good guy.
Ewa: Terry’s fantastic, he’s the salt of the earth, he really is.
He’s become a real good friend as well as – we’re both obviously involved
with Brunswick – but he’s just a really good person.
D"C"A: When you practice, what was your schedule?
Ewa: Well, I think when I was playing my best, mostly I just played.
I would play by myself until I ran into someone who would, maybe somebody who
came to the poolroom, that would be a good sparing partner.
D"C"A: How do you practice?
Ewa: You just rack or just throw the balls out, all fifteen or nine balls
and just run them off and then when I run into a problem or something that I
would have a hard time with I would shoot that same shot, over and over and over
until it felt comfortable again. And then practice things like my break or jump
shot and all that. Mainly it was just throwing the balls out there and playing,
getting to the point where the table feels like it’s about a foot and a half by
three feet in size. I used to play 8-10 hours a day and now I play nowhere near
that. I’m still just as competitive as I was but my game is not as solid as it
used to be. It’s very much more sporadic than it used to be. That’s hard to take.
D"C"A: Do you think that’s concentration?
Ewa: No. I feel a big part of it is instead of playing 8-10 hours a day
I’m playing 1 or 2 hours a day. I guess I don’t feel the need to prove … I used
to feel like I needed to prove myself, I needed acceptance. I guess, with age and
the fact that I’ve won all the major titles there are to win, I don’t have the same
hunger I used to have.
D"C"A: I get that feeling sometimes myself but then I re-energize myself
for whatever reason - I get beat by someone that is blind or something an it just
kind of shakes me up, I think. How long have you been doing play-by-play?
Ewa: Oh, I’ve been doing that on and off for years, since probably the early
90’s. I used to do it way back even late 80’s. I would guest commentate quite a bit
here and there. Matches weren’t broadcast on TV that often back then. I’ve been doing
commentary on and off since then.
D"C"A: I met you and Mitch when I was out there at Lincoln City. What did
you think of the Northwest and the Pacific Ocean?
Ewa: We love it! We went fishing while we were there actually with Terry.
We caught a 38 and 40 pounder, Salmon and we had the time of our life. We actually
were talking about making a golf trip out there when the weather was a little
warmer. And we were talking to Terry about how great it would be to have a place
out there somewhere in the mountains. We really like the outdoors both Mitch and I.
We both love to play golf and it doesn’t get any prettier than the Northwest. It
is the most breathtaking place. I’ve never been up to Washington. I hear about all
the nature and the woods, everything up in that area. I’ve never been out there.
I’ve never been to Montana, so I think now that my daughter is kind of fending for
herself in a different way. We’ve been talking about when we go out to tournaments
and stuff – when we go out to that area that we actually stay and see something.
D"C"A: What kind of cue do you use?
Ewa: Bob Hunter’s Cue – Hunter Cue.
Bob’s originally from Grand Rapids, Michigan and Bob’s a World Champion Straight
Pool player. He now lives in and makes cues. He kind of went the same way Sigel
did, he makes cues, he lives in Nevada. I think Carson City.
D"C"A: Do you have a favorite place to play, Myrtle Beach or do you go
somewhere else?
Ewa: Actually there’s no real poolroom here that I go to. I play at home.
I have a Brunswick Montebello in my house where I made a really nice poolroom, so
that’s where I usually play. Every once in a while I go up to Wilmington, there’s a
poolroom up there but its kind of tough to stay sharp because I don’t have anyone
to spar with. I’ll be playing on my table at home and I’ll be playing great and all
of a sudden I get to a tournament and there’s an actual opponent firing back at me.
It makes it a little tougher.
D"C"A: Do you do have any charities?
Ewa: Make A Wish Foundation is my main charity, but also the Cancer
Research Foundation. My husband had prostate cancer 2 years ago, so that one hit
closer to home than you ever expect or want it to. Those are my two main
charities and I’m really involved with the Make A Wish Foundation.
D"C"A: Both in the ranks of professional and amateur players there has
been in the past 20 to 25 years a tremendous growth in pool, what do you contribute
that to?
Ewa: I give the WPBA an amazing amount of credit because I think sports
and recreation is overall very cyclical. People, it kind of comes and goes, it
becomes the in thing to do then it kind of disappears. Right now poker is all the
rage. Poker’s been around forever but if you look 5 years ago and 5 years from now,
there’s a good chance poker may or may not be the rage.
I think that the fact that the WPBA has managed to keep consistently on
television – Yes, we’re short on a lot of thing. We need regular time slots. We
need ESPN to help promote us instead of putting it on when it’s convenient. I don’t
mind the reruns being on whenever, but the original program, the first time it’s
shown, we need to be able to build a fan base and give our fans a chance to
follow and to build on that. So there’s a lot of things missing but I think the
fact that we’re staying out there, we’re showing a really professional – what a
great family sport it is. What a great intelligent sport it is. It’s a sexy sport.
It’s all the way around, it doesn’t matter what walk of life you’re in it’s just a
great fame for everybody. I think that that’s one of the things, men’s sports
have always been great, but women’s pool has really brought a lot of that
attention to it.
D"C"A: What about on the amateur level?
Ewa: I think the amateur level too. I think that feeds it. First of all the
serious amateur, especially on the women’s side but even on the men’s side has
really seen an opportunity so that there’s actually the next level to go to. In
pool out there the professional tour, is growing by leaps and bounds so there’s
someplace to go – there’s something. That if you’re an aspiring professional then
there’s someplace to go now, which there never was in the past. I also think that
the APA, the BCA, the Valley league – the N-P-B-A – what is it? N-B – I’m
alphabet soup here …
D"C"A: There’s the VNEA, BCA, there’s TAP, there’s APA …
Ewa: Right, all those leagues are all doing their part of promoting the
game. Yeah, most of them are businesses and that’s wonderful and I hope they do
really well, but the main thing is that as they’re doing their business, it’s
promoting pool all over the place. And also BCA’s program with the juniors. There
are so many girls now that come to our tournaments and say “I’ve been watching you
on TV” or “I’ve always dreamed of being a professional player.” How many , other
than if Daddy owns a poolroom, how many 12 year old girls have even thought about
pool before. So it’s all, everybody is doing their part. Everybody’s bringing it
together and this is what I’ve always dreamed of, is that the industry would
actually come together. The proprietors, the dealers, the manufacturers, the players
and work towards common goals. And try to fight against other sports to get our
recognition as opposed to be fighting against each other, which is ludicrous.
Because as we’re fighting against each other – other sports out there are taking
our TV time. They’re taking our sponsorship dollars. They’re taking our opportunity
because we’re too busy bickering amongst ourselves. I think that that has to
change and it’s still changing and it’s really neat to see.
D"C"A: There has been a lot of Asian players come in, in the past few years
and them seem to be making a lot of noise, great players, what do you think?
Ewa: Well, I think it’s fantastic. This really shows that now only are we
doing our stuff here but things are happening all over the world as far as pool
goes. Asia has really taken off. I mean it’s always been big in the Philippines
and Japan. When we were over in Japan, in the early to mid 80’s and especially
right after the late 80’s when the “Color of Money” hit, it went crazy in Japan.
Every block had a poolroom on it all of a sudden. Loree Jon Jones, myself, Vicki
Pasky, Robin Bell, Robin Dodson, some of us, we were over there playing tournaments
in the mid to late 80’s. But then it’s really grown. China’s where it’s really
become popular, Taiwan, Europe, Australia. It’s really grown at a tremendous pace,
so I think as far as the players doing well over here first of all there’s a big
pool of people over there and that’s part of it but a big part of it is they’re
taking it very seriously. So for instance when Allison Fisher or Karen Corr learned
how to play snooker, it wasn’t just in a poolroom somewhere or watching somebody.
There’s actually, there’s professionals that actually teach fundamentals over
there. In Asia, when you talk to, there’s coaches, there’s people like Jennifer
Chen or Ga Young Kim, work with that are like billiards trainers and that
professionalism is something that we are behind on here in the United States.
That’s something we are finally starting to figure out now to where all these
nice billiard rooms now. You should be able to go to a poolroom and find a
professional that you can work with in every single poolroom, no different than
at a golf course.
Women have been lagging behind and in Asia, they went up, that’s automatic and
they jumped ahead of us. So girls like Ga Young Kim now are learning from, how
to hold a cue stick correctly. Not by trial and error and wasting three years
but having some body help her right from the start teaching her both mental
toughness and the physical aspects of the game and how to think the game and
everything else and I think that is really showing up in how good both the men’s
and women’s side, how good these players really are.
It makes no sense if you don’t get instructions, because that’s like saying that
Tiger Woods sucks because he actually goes to a tournament and gets a lesson once
in a while.
D"C"A: Tiger, the best golfer in the world gets training – so why shouldn’t
we or you or me.
Ewa: Exactly. It’s no different than – the minute we stop growing you’re done
D"C"A: Yes, you stop learning, and it’s over. Do you have anything to add?
Ewa: I’m forever, forever, forever grateful to Brunswick Billiards who back
in the late 80’s, before I was ranked #9 or whatever I put up, to sign me on and let
me actually have this as my profession and support my daughter. I am forever grateful
to my husband, to Mitch, for supporting me, and helping me out and my daughter
for being patient and understanding when Mom has to go out of town, and to the
WPBA, all the women that have been so instrumental in taking this sport to where
it is now. We always had the dream that someday we’d actually make a living
playing pool and it’s happening and there’s aspiring pros coming up now that,
it may not be in my lifetime but it may be shortly thereafter or at least not
in my career, that men or women players can actually, the top 20, the top 30
can make a good living from playing on the tour.
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