Hustling

Hustling is the deceptive act of misleading one's skill in a sport or game with the intent of luring someone of lesser skill into gambling, or gambling for higher than current stakes. It is commonly associated with pool and other billiards-family games. Hustlers may also engage in "sharking" - the use of distracting, disheartening, enraging or even threatening behavior to throw their opponents off. Hustlers are thus often called "pool sharks". Professional and semi-pro hustlers sometimes work with a "stake horse" – a person who provides money for the hustler to bet with (and may assist in the hustling), in exchange for a substantial portion of all winnings.

Pool hustling techniques

Pool hustlers use deception and misdirection in order to dupe money from inexperienced players or skilled players inexperienced with the world of hustling.

A skilled hustler:

  • Will usually play with a house cue, or a plane looking but high-quality personal cue, known as a "sneaky pete". With the nascence of local league play in recent years, some may also play with flashy-looking but self-evidently low-end personal cues, to give the impression that they are league players who think they are "hot stuff" but presumably are not as good as they think.

  • Will typically play a game or two for "fun" or for low bets (a beer or equivalent amount of cash, for example) in order to check out the opponent and give the impression that money can be won, often losing on purpose (known as "sandbagging" or "dumping") – with the intent of winning a much larger sums later against a predictably overconfident opponent.

  • Will pocket some difficult and impressive shots or make surprisingly secure safety shots (ones crucial for winning), while missing many simple ones, thus making early victories appear to be sheer luck (a variant being the theatrical almost-making of shots that inexperienced players may think of as crucial mistakes, but which really give away very little advantage)

  • May pretend to be intoxicated, unintelligent, or otherwise impaired (that is, until it is time to run the table or make a game-winning shot)

Many of these ploys can easily be mistaken for the honest faults of a less-than-exceptional player. The engendered doubt and uncertainty is what allows hustling to succeed, with the "faults" being dropped when a significant amount of money is at stake.

Pool hustling was the subject of very well-received films such as The Hustler (1961) and The Color of Money (1986) (both adapted from earlier novels, see "Books", below), and a few less-acclaimed pictures (see "Films", below). It was also the principal subject of episodes of the television programs The Steve Harvey Show, Drake and Josh and the The Fresh Prince of Bel Air.[clarify]

Notable real-life hustlers

  • Rudolph "Minnesota Fats" Wanderone, famous hustler and entertainer.

  • Chef Anton, trick shot artist and author of several hustling manuals.

  • Keith McCready, a legendary road player.

  • Billy "Cornbread Red" Burge, another legendary player, from Detroit.

  • Danny "Kid Delicious" Basavich, former hustler turned top-ranking professional.

  • Rick Ross

  • Rich Stanton

Notable books about and/or by hustlers

  • The Hustler (1959), a novel by Walter Tevis, ISBN 0-380008-60-2, ISBN 1-568490-44-5, ISBN 1-560254-73-4

  • The Color of Money (1984), sequel by Walter Tevis, ISBN 0-446323-53-5, ISBN 0-44634-419-2, ISBN 0-349101-50-7, ISBN 1-568496-89-3, ISBN 1-560254-85-8

  • McGoorty: A Billiard Hustler's Life, also known as McGoorty: A Pool Room Hustler (1984/2003), nonfiction by Robert Byrne and Danny McGoorty, ISBN 0-806509-25-2; ISBN 1-894963-12-1, ISBN 0-767916-31-X