I'm curious Joey, which changes are those? 10 ball? The gyrations around the break?
Shouldn't we be in favor of any rule change that is an advantage for the more skillful player? Isn't it better for the better players to win the tournaments? Should they flip coins instead?
I understand what you are saying Bob, but I'd hardly consider a 9 Ball tournament a coin flip. When was the last time a banger won the US Open 9 Ball, or even the Swanee for that matter? Yet it does offer the dead money the perception they have a better opportunity to come in the cash than a 10 Ball event does. Actually, it probably will not affect what caliber of player will win the event, and the additional luck in 9 Ball is probably more perceived than actual to the dead money that might consider entering the event.
The World Series of Poker main event is $10 grand to enter, for gosh sakes, yet thousands line up to test their "luck". How many really think they have the pure skill to compete with a Phil Ivey? But the perceived luck is enough to convince a lot of people to throw in and try - and many more to tune in to see if an amateur can beat the world beaters - even on one hand.
At the Predator 10 Ball in Vegas a couple of years ago, I think it was Yu Ram Cha who played a heavily favored SVB. As YRC hung in with Shane the crowd got real excited. By the time YRC was on the hill everyone in the crowd had come over to that table to watch. When she won, the crowd went nuts. OK, it was 10 Ball, but the example was just to illustrate people are interested when a heavy underdog has a shot at beating the favorite. Giving the underdog a shot, even if only a perceived one, ain't automatically a bad thing.
Besides, one could argue there is a lot more luck in the 10 Ball break than the 9 Ball break, and quite often a match is decided by "who broke better". Well, since the 10 ball rack is considered to produce a more random break than 9 Ball, one could say that the guy who "broke better" is really the guy who got luckier. And the guy who broke better is often the deciding factor in a 10 Ball match.
I just don't see why in pool there is this effort to try to legislate ALL of the luck out of the game because it's just not possible. I just think that when discussing expert play some people exaggerate the amount of luck involved in 9 Ball and underplay the luck involved in 10 Ball. At the pro level, there is not much in either, but probably more in the 10 Ball break, and the break is a big part of determining the winner. Footballs bounce funny and baseballs occasionally take a bad hop. Luck plays a little part in every game that uses balls.
DPP <<< likes 9 Ball and 10 Ball. :grin: