Not sure about you guys, but I am still enjoying all the Mary Avina videos...:thumbup:
Where are they?
Not sure about you guys, but I am still enjoying all the Mary Avina videos...:thumbup:
What I was saying is everyone is dogging her saying she not a PRO player when in fact she is a pro by womens standards. Chris is a pro player by mens standards. They are both lower tier pros. The rules for most non pro tourneys are if you have ever been paid winnings in a pro or open tourney. Both of them have. Ergo they are both considered pros.I was referring to that line of argument (women vs. men pros) being misused in the context of this thread (is E.D. a pro/world class pro), not calling you a scarecrow.
I'm not that familiar with Bartram's game, but I would venture a guess and say he's a "regional pro" or perhaps a very, very strong shortstop.
-roger
What I was saying is everyone is dogging her saying she not a PRO player when in fact she is a pro by womens standards. Chris is a pro player by mens standards. They are both lower tier pros. The rules for most non pro tourneys are if you have ever been paid winnings in a pro or open tourney. Both of them have. Ergo they are both considered pros.
Well, even this can be argued because who's to say what qualifies any poolplayer as a "pro"? In golf they have a tour card. In rodeo they have a PBA card. In baseball, football, basketball, etc. they have organizations that are well-known to the general public (and without a doubt to anyone) to be professional. I could go on and on with examples, but I won't. In pool, all we basically have is a "word of mouth" proclamation of someone being a "pro". I've seen names of men and women tossed out in conversations as being "pros" that in my opinion were not in a tier to be considered part of the world's best (say top 100). How many "tiers" of pros do we have anyway? Who makes any decisions about which tier any given poolplayer, man or woman, belongs in? So, some local shortstop enters an open tournament that is being held near his hometown, has a decent run, finishes in some small money, and is now considered a "pro"??? Surely there's a better way. To call this local shortstop a pro is watering-down the term "pro". There should be some kind of method/criteria of qualifying as a "pro" than just winning some small amount of cash ONE TIME in an open or pro tournament.
So, who really decides who is and who isn't a pro? It's a crap-shoot often determined by an individual opinion.
Maniac
it is decided by tourneys, if you play in a pro tourney and place in the money you are considered pro. Do I agree with this, no but this is what we have. I wish we had a system like golf with qualifiers.
Well, even this can be argued because who's to say what qualifies any poolplayer as a "pro"? In golf they have a tour card. In rodeo they have a PBA card. In baseball, football, basketball, etc. they have organizations that are well-known to the general public (and without a doubt to anyone) to be professional. I could go on and on with examples, but I won't. In pool, all we basically have is a "word of mouth" proclamation of someone being a "pro". I've seen names of men and women tossed out in conversations as being "pros" that in my opinion were not in a tier to be considered part of the world's best (say top 100). How many "tiers" of pros do we have anyway? Who makes any decisions about which tier any given poolplayer, man or woman, belongs in? So, some local shortstop enters an open tournament that is being held near his hometown, has a decent run, finishes in some small money, and is now considered a "pro"??? Surely there's a better way. To call this local shortstop a pro is watering-down the term "pro". There should be some kind of method/criteria of qualifying as a "pro" than just winning some small amount of cash ONE TIME in an open or pro tournament.
So, who really decides who is and who isn't a pro? It's a crap-shoot often determined by an individual opinion.
Maniac
What I was saying is everyone is dogging her saying she not a PRO player when in fact she is a pro by womens standards.
No. No she is not. THAT is the point many of us have been making all along. It was never about comparing women to men. It was about comparing Emily to the other WOMEN players out there. And frankly, she doesn't stack up. Sure she's ranked 20th in the WPBA... because she plays every event. There are a number of players ranked LOWER than her who would give her the 7 and still win. Emily is a pro because the WPBA ain't what it used to be. She's not a "great player".
I could name 10 girls from the U.S. that never play that could or have cracked the top 20 in today's WPBA.
A portion of this argument seems rather silly to me. Actually, a lot of it is silly, but one thing in particular....
If Emily is ranked by the WPBA, it certainly seems to me that she is considered "a professional" by the one governing body that matters.
As to whether or not she can be beaten by others is a moot point. The Women's Professional Billiards Association considers her to be a pro, because the include her in their rankings. It doesn't matter that she plays in more events than others, she participates, and is included in their results. She has no control over who else decides to participate. End of story.
Carry on.
A portion of this argument seems rather silly to me. Actually, a lot of it is silly, but one thing in particular....
If Emily is ranked by the WPBA, it certainly seems to me that she is considered "a professional" by the one governing body that matters.
As to whether or not she can be beaten by others is a moot point. The Women's Professional Billiards Association considers her to be a pro, because the include her in their rankings. It doesn't matter that she plays in more events than others, she participates, and is included in their results. She has no control over who else decides to participate. End of story.
Carry on.
Don't recall Emily or anyone else saying they believe her to be a 'world class' player? And its not about a threat to win, but willing to step up to the plate.
Not too different than me playing 1P at Derby City. Some folks just worry about being embarrased, or god forbid someone says they do not belong.
She's a very good player, trying to get better, and stepping up to the plate whenever possible, and marketing herself to make a little coin along the way. Not so sure that is a bad plan... just saying,.
A portion of this argument seems rather silly to me. Actually, a lot of it is silly, but one thing in particular....
If Emily is ranked by the WPBA, it certainly seems to me that she is considered "a professional" by the one governing body that matters.
As to whether or not she can be beaten by others is a moot point. The Women's Professional Billiards Association considers her to be a pro, because the include her in their rankings. It doesn't matter that she plays in more events than others, she participates, and is included in their results. She has no control over who else decides to participate. End of story.
Carry on.
What I was saying is everyone is dogging her saying she not a PRO player when in fact she is a pro by womens standards. Chris is a pro player by mens standards. They are both lower tier pros. The rules for most non pro tourneys are if you have ever been paid winnings in a pro or open tourney. Both of them have. Ergo they are both considered pros.
The funny part is the folks that are kinda dissing her are pretty much "low level player" nobodies, that most likely hate the fact that though they may be close to her level on a good day, get their arse kicked on a regular basis by most men![]()