Lyndonville teen emerges as a top billiards player
Jake Jackson will compete in ‘Battle of the Junior Champions’ next month in Georgia
MEDINA – Jake Jackson is not an average teenager.
Jake, who will be 15 on Feb. 9, doesn’t play video games and doesn’t constantly have his phone in hand. The son of Roger and Terah Jackson of Mill Road attends church regularly, excels in Boy Scouts, enjoys fishing, works out three days a week and maintains a 90 average in school.
One of his passions is playing pool and Jake is one of the top youth players in the country.
Jake has recently qualified for a prestigious billiards event in Villa Rica, Ga. in March, called “The Monica Web Battle of the Junior Champions.” Monica Web is a champion pool player. Only the top 20 players 18 and under from the USA and Canada are allowed to qualify for this event. Sponsored by the Billiard Education Foundation, the young players are required to keep high grades in school, have good manners and observe a dress code when competing.
Most of the kids competing here are home-schooled, Roger Jackson said, and practice 10 hours a day. He said a tournament can last 12 to 18 hours.
Jake grew up around a pool table, as his father used to compete in the sport. Roger said he played in one Pro-Am event for fun and won some local competitions in Buffalo and Rochester. They had a pool table in the garage and Jake was only 5 when he would come out and watch his father practice.
“He couldn’t even reach the table, yet,” Roger said.
When he got big enough, Jake would play occasionally, but never took it seriously. He hadn’t touched a pool stick in a number of years when, at the age of 12, his parents took him to Curly’s in Lyndonville one Friday night for a fish fry.
“There were a bunch of fishermen in town for a fishing tournament, and Jake beat them pretty badly,” Roger said.
“I thought it was just beginner’s luck,” Roger said. “But watching him practice at home, I realized he was a natural.”
That prompted him to buy a regulation-size pool table, where Jake practices every day. His father said he soon couldn’t beat his son.
Jake has competed and won twice at a fundraiser for the Variety Kids’ Telethon at Bison Billiards at Eastern Hills Mall. He will compete there Saturday for a $5,000 first prize.
In August, Jake will be in the Joss Northeast 9 Ball Tour Final at Turning Stone Casino in Verona. He will be the youngest player ever to compete in this ProAm event, which has $40,000 in prizes.
Jake said his father has taught him a lot of the fundamentals, and he has learned from watching YouTube and reading his father’s books on billiards.
In his first big tournament in Philadelphia, Jake finished an impressive third. Last year, he beat the world champion in one game.
Roger is a mechanic at Medina Central School’s bus garage, and Jake’s mother owns Sal de Coiffure on Maple Ridge Road, but they still find time to take Jake to his competitions on weekends, going to Buffalo, Rochester, Utica, Philadelphia and last summer, making the trek to Kentucky.
The family would like to find a sponsor for Jake’s trips, and anyone who would like to contribute may do so on Jake’s Facebook page through Messenger. Or donations may be dropped off at Salon de Coiffure.
Jake hopes after outgrowing the Junior Tour, he can become a professional pool player.