Francisco Bustamante (born December 29, 1963) is a
Filipino professional
pool player from
Tarlac,
Central Luzon and the
2010 World Nine-ball Champion,[1] nicknamed "Django", after the lead character of
the 1966 film of the same name,[2] and sometimes also called "Bustie", especially in the United States. Bustamante has won over 70 International titles and is considered one of the best pool players of all time.[3][4][5]
Early life
Bustamante is the youngest of eight siblings. He picked up the nickname "Django" because his character and his appearance with a cigarette in his mouth was reminiscent of the movie character of that name. His father made a living through building toilets and planting rice, and Bustamante also worked in these activities. He began working in his sister's pool hall, racking and spotting balls on the tables, and practising alone on the tables after the hall had closed.[6]
Bustamante never completed high school and concentrated on pocket billiards from 10 years of age. After some success in the Philippines, Bustamante moved to Germany where he stayed for over ten years, competing in a number of tournaments in Europe.[7]
Professional career
Bustamante has won titles including the Munich Masters, the German Nine-ball Championship, and the
All Japan Championship.
With his win in
Tulsa, Bustamante became champion of the 1998 Camel Pro Billiards Series year-long point fund. He then finished the season by winning the Columbus 10-Ball Open and becoming the first player to win three Camel titles in one season. His Columbus 10-Ball title completed the first ever Camel trifecta, with titles in each of the three games contested on the Camel Pro Billiards Series:
eight-ball,
nine-ball and
ten-ball. Known for his flamboyant style at the table and behind-the-back shots, Bustamante also holds the world record for having the most powerful break shot.
The next year, Bustamante won the Motolite 9-ball Tournament, an event held in the Philippines, beating
Antonio Lining. The victory prize was $30,000, the largest first prize offered in a Philippine-held tournament at that time.
In 2002, Bustamante received a phone call from his wife during the World Pool Championships, informing him that his daughter, who was less than a year old, had died. Bustamante considered forfeiting his contention at the tournament to return to the Philippines, but some people around including fellow countryman
Efren Reyes convinced him to go on.[9]
On his way to the final, Bustamante beat
Antonio Lining in the last 16,
Efren Reyes in the quarter finals, and Ching Shun Yang in the semis. In the final, he met
Earl Strickland, twice winner of the tournament. After leading for most of the match, Bustamante lost the match 17–15.
Bustamante won the Peninsula Nine-ball Open, Gabriel's Las Vegas International Nine-ball tournament, the IBC Tokyo Nine-ball International, and the All Japan Nine-ball Championship. He also won the Sudden Death Seven-ball tournament, dedicating the victory to his daughter. With this string of victories, he became the AZBilliards 2002 Player of the Year.[10]
In 2010, Bustamante again reached the finals of the World Nine-ball Championship, winning the match and the title against Taiwan's
Kuo Po-cheng.[15]
On July 27, 2010, Francisco Bustamante, along with Terry Bell and Larry Hubbart, founders of the American Pool Players Association (APA), were elected to the
Billiard Congress of America Hall of Fame,[16] and inducted on October 21, 2010.[17] Bustamante was the second player from the Philippines to be inducted, after Efren Reyes.
^"The Survey Says...: Pool & Billiard Magazine's 22nd Annual Player and Fan Poll". Pool & Billiard Magazine. Vol. 26, no. 2.
Summerville, South Carolina: Sports Publications. February 2008. p. 14.
ISSN1049-2852.