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Legends of the Cue

Legends of the Cue

By: Allison Fisher Mark Wilson & Mike Gonzalez
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"Legends of the Cue" is a cue sports history podcast featuring interviews with notable players, promoters, administrators and other people of influence in and around cue sports. We also plan to highlight memorable brands, events and venues. Focusing on the positive aspects of the sport, we aim to create and provide an engaging and timeless repository of content that listeners can enjoy now and forever. Co-hosted by WPA and BCA Hall of Fame member Allison Fisher, Mosconi Cup player and captain Mark Wilson, our podcast focuses on telling the life stories of cue sport’s greatest, in their voices. Join Allison, Mark and Mike Gonzalez for “Legends of the Cue.”


© 2026 Legends of the Cue
Episodes
  • George Ashby - Part 4 (Still Playing, Still Remembering, Still George Ashby)
    May 26 2026

    Part 4 brings our remarkable conversation with George Ashby to a thoughtful and deeply satisfying close. In this final episode, George reflects on the later chapters of his billiard life: returning to the game, staying connected to three-cushion, remembering the great players and rooms of the past, and considering what it all meant.

    There is something especially moving in hearing a master look back. George speaks with humility, humor, and honesty about still playing, still thinking about the game, and still carrying with him the lessons learned from a lifetime in cue sports. He shares memories of legendary players, unforgettable matches, and the extraordinary personalities who shaped the carom world in America and beyond. These recollections are more than anecdotes — they are oral history, preserved in exactly the spirit Legends of the Cue was created to honor.

    This episode also reveals the character behind the champion. George’s warmth comes through in every answer. He is reflective without being sentimental, proud without ever sounding boastful, and generous in the way he credits others who influenced his life and game. As the conversation winds down, what remains is a portrait of a man who helped carry American three-cushion from one era into another while never losing sight of the joy, beauty, and mystery that drew him to the game in the first place.

    If the earlier episodes tell us how George Ashby became a great player, this final chapter tells us why his story matters. It is about memory, legacy, and the enduring value of hearing these stories while the voices are still here to tell them.

    Give Allison, Mark & Mike some feedback via Text.

    Support the show

    Follow our show and/or leave a review/rating on:

    Our website: https://www.legendsofthecue.com

    Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/legends-of-the-cue/id1820520463

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4Za0IMh2SeNaWEGUHaVcy1

    Music by Lyrium.

    About

    "Legends of the Cue" is a cue sports history podcast featuring interviews with Hall of Fame members, world champions, and influential figures from across the world of cue sports—including pocket billiards, snooker, and carom disciplines such as three-cushion billiards. We highlight the people, places, and moments that have shaped the game—celebrating iconic players, memorable events, historic venues, and the brands that helped define generations of play. With a focus on the positive spirit of the sport, our goal is to create a rich, engaging, and timeless archive of stories that fans can enjoy now and for years to come.

    Co-hosted by WPA and BCA Hall of Fame member Allison Fisher and Mosconi Cup player and captain Mark Wilson, Legends of the Cue brings these stories to life—told in the voices of the game’s greatest figures.

    Join Allison, Mark and Mike Gonzalez for “Legends of the Cue.”

    Show More Show Less
    31 mins
  • George Ashby - Part 3 (World Championships, Life Changes, and the Cost of Greatness)
    May 26 2026

    In Part 3, George Ashby takes us deeper into the realities of life at the top of three-cushion billiards — and the very human struggles that can come with it. This chapter of his story spans world championships, national titles, international travel, equipment changes, and the demands of balancing billiards with the responsibilities of owning and operating a family business.

    George recalls the shock of his first world championship appearances, where the conditions, equipment, lighting, pace of play, and level of competition were unlike anything he had known in the Midwest. He talks about adapting on the fly, learning from the great international players, and returning home determined to rebuild his game for true world-class conditions. For students of cue sports history, these stories are gold: a firsthand account of how American players matched themselves against the European and Asian powers of the carom world.

    But this episode also turns toward the personal. George reflects on what happened when downtown Jacksonville changed, Drexel Billiards could no longer survive, and the place that had shaped both his livelihood and his practice life was gone. He speaks openly about the difficult period that followed, including how losing the room affected his game and his life away from the table.

    What emerges here is not just the story of a champion, but the story of resilience. George’s honesty gives this part of the conversation real weight. Greatness in cue sports is never only about titles and trophies — it is also about sacrifice, adaptation, heartbreak, and the ability to keep coming back when the game, and life, take away the familiar ground beneath your feet.

    Give Allison, Mark & Mike some feedback via Text.

    Support the show

    Follow our show and/or leave a review/rating on:

    Our website: https://www.legendsofthecue.com

    Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/legends-of-the-cue/id1820520463

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4Za0IMh2SeNaWEGUHaVcy1

    Music by Lyrium.

    About

    "Legends of the Cue" is a cue sports history podcast featuring interviews with Hall of Fame members, world champions, and influential figures from across the world of cue sports—including pocket billiards, snooker, and carom disciplines such as three-cushion billiards. We highlight the people, places, and moments that have shaped the game—celebrating iconic players, memorable events, historic venues, and the brands that helped define generations of play. With a focus on the positive spirit of the sport, our goal is to create a rich, engaging, and timeless archive of stories that fans can enjoy now and for years to come.

    Co-hosted by WPA and BCA Hall of Fame member Allison Fisher and Mosconi Cup player and captain Mark Wilson, Legends of the Cue brings these stories to life—told in the voices of the game’s greatest figures.

    Join Allison, Mark and Mike Gonzalez for “Legends of the Cue.”

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • George Ashby - Part 2 (High Runs, Hard Lessons, and Chasing the World’s Best)
    May 19 2026

    Part 2 of our conversation with George Ashby moves from the room to the arena, as George takes us inside the thought process, discipline, and competitive fire required to become a world-class three-cushion player. This is the episode where the game opens up. George explains the importance of scoring average, position play, shot selection, and concentration, giving listeners a rare window into what elite three-cushion really looks like from the player’s chair.

    Along the way, he reflects on high runs, the satisfaction of controlled scoring, and the moment he realized that offense — not merely defense — would be the future of the game. He speaks candidly about studying his own matches, identifying weak spots in his concentration, and developing a more aggressive, television-friendly style built around scoring in bunches. It is a fascinating portrait of a player thinking several shots ahead while also thinking years ahead about where the sport itself needed to go.

    George also shares the enormous influence of the European masters, including Raymond Ceulemans, Ludo Dielis, Nobuaki Kobayashi, and the systems and stroke variations that transformed his understanding of three-cushion. What he learned from international play forced him to rethink everything: equipment, tempo, speed control, and even how a champion should approach offense.

    This episode captures the stretch where talent becomes craft. George is no longer simply a gifted young player from Illinois — he is becoming a student of the world game, measuring himself against the very best, and building the style that would define his championship years. For anyone who loves the deeper strategy of cue sports, this is a master class wrapped inside a life story.

    Give Allison, Mark & Mike some feedback via Text.

    Support the show

    Follow our show and/or leave a review/rating on:

    Our website: https://www.legendsofthecue.com

    Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/legends-of-the-cue/id1820520463

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4Za0IMh2SeNaWEGUHaVcy1

    Music by Lyrium.

    About

    "Legends of the Cue" is a cue sports history podcast featuring interviews with Hall of Fame members, world champions, and influential figures from across the world of cue sports—including pocket billiards, snooker, and carom disciplines such as three-cushion billiards. We highlight the people, places, and moments that have shaped the game—celebrating iconic players, memorable events, historic venues, and the brands that helped define generations of play. With a focus on the positive spirit of the sport, our goal is to create a rich, engaging, and timeless archive of stories that fans can enjoy now and for years to come.

    Co-hosted by WPA and BCA Hall of Fame member Allison Fisher and Mosconi Cup player and captain Mark Wilson, Legends of the Cue brings these stories to life—told in the voices of the game’s greatest figures.

    Join Allison, Mark and Mike Gonzalez for “Legends of the Cue.”

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
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