There's nothing wrong with sexiness in sports.![]()
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You're absolutely right, CJ.
You know the funny thing is that young lady is actually looking at someone in the stands.
There's nothing wrong with sexiness in sports.![]()
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IMO that is like saying that fighting is suffering because you have boxing, kickboxing, Thai boxing, judo, jiu jitsu, etc.
Mma will never work, right, because the average joe can't even tell the difference between kickboxing and Thai boxing, they don't even know the rule differences in those two and now we are bringing in a new sport?
Boxing has been around for years and everyone understands it, the UFC should have went with those rules, right?
My point is BB is fresh, it is complex enough to satisfy and even excite the hardcore player if they were to give it a chance and play and learn the game, it is organized to be perfect for the sports gambling industry, & it is exciting enough and has enough dramatic moments to draw in the casual sports fan if marketed right.
BB is not the wrong game, it had the wrong management behind it.
CJ, you're a businessman as well as a pool player. Do really think that some sort of new gimmick is to going to spark the public interest and bring more people into the local poolrooms?![]()
We just haven't had the right "people formula" quite yet.....Kevin T. was the closest we have come so far, and make no mistake HE GOT VERY CLOSE.....but no "cigar".<--Very true, I agree !
This is just a silly example {of course} but I think you see my point.
THE GAME IS THE TEACHER [/URL]
Quite the contrary, I believe doing away with the gimmicks will be the key. The game of pool may be the best game in existence.... it as the "master game".
If never needed any of the gimmicks, it has everything needed to be successful, for it's never been the game that's the problem, it's "other" things. If the producers/promoters of the NFL, PGA and the NBA were told "either they make pool the #1 game or you lose everything you have" - POOL WOULD BE #1 within 12 months or maybe even less.
We just haven't had the right "people formula" quite yet.....Kevin T. was the closest we have come so far, and make no mistake HE GOT VERY CLOSE.....but no "cigar".![]()
This is just a silly example {of course} but I think you see my point.
Click Pic
THE GAME IS THE TEACHER
Those rooms were gambling rooms and pool was the term used as to mean the pool of money pool tables were put in for patrons to have something to do in between horse races they were betting on
That is where the word 'pool' came from, yes. (in Europe)
But no, they werent 'gambling' rooms. Gambling was illegal.
Did people gamble here and there? Sure, they always have, but there were not 2000 (illegal) gambling joints in Chicago. That's a silly notion.
80k [is] less than a Union Plumber makes in NYC
But it's more than a police officer makes.
Either way, it has nothing to do with what you originally said.
"Profession" is not defined by salary.
Neither is "major sport".
Even the best in the world in any [year] have made far less than top professionals outside of sports, never mind top sport players in real sports
Not true. I know of plenty of professionals who dont make 80k.
And again, this has nothing to do with what you claimed.
That's why they have a term when asked how someone got good at pool the reply is a miss spent youth.
Apparently you are not aware that Willie Hoppe, one of the best and most respected players in the history of billiards, was trained by his father, before he was even old enough to see over the table. (And he was not the only one) What you dont seem to (want to) realize is the fact that there really were true professional billiard players in every sense of the word.
But you have to crawl before you can walk and pool is still in the crib
Pool is BACK in the crib.
Which is sad because there was in fact a time that professional players were treated as city-wide, state-wide, and even nation-wide heroes, that any parent would have been proud of. Chicago even designated a special day of the year in memory of a famous player. This is not something they would have ever done for a professional hustler or successful gambler.
With a imagination like you got , who needs the pipe
Those sports did not become popular over night , it took yrs and many many people to come together to get those sports to be what they are
There is no way on earth they could click their fingers and make pool #1 over night and that of course would only happen if the had to suspend their teams from playing
All the marketing in the world is not going to make pool a better sport to watch than any of the sports in front of it , just like no matter what kinda makeover you give Roseanne shes not going to look like Julia Roberts
KT only got close in the wishful thinking dept he failed miserably in the application dept
A reasonable plan has to have a reasonable chance for success that starts with knowing the true value of the product he way over estimated that value ,
1
first off lets be honest with ourselves, most "pool players" are cheap! they expect you to give them everything for free because they send a couple hours a week at your poolhall during league night and maybe buy a beer. having league is overrated. most teams and players will just show up for a couple then leave. 2nd juke boxes are now a joke since everyone has a smartphone and can listen for free. I don't want to ramble but I think the most successful poolhall is one that has a poolhall 2nd and another part in the forefront i.e. bar/restaurant
I guess this guy has it all wrong on the history of pool but hey what do I know I was not thereMy apologies for going slightly off topic here...
But hey, believe what you want. Its a free country.
Are you still bitter because you "almost" invested in Poker?....or was it Microsoft?.....or maybe APPLE???......or did you just say the same thing about all of them and bury your head deeper, and deeper in the sand.....or, as you say "the pipe".![]()
This reminds me of the {mentally challenged} kid that told my I could never get the chain back on my bicycle because it was "impossible". :groucho:
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CJ, I would like to hear your take on my posts #207 and #230...I place a LOT of emphasis on the actual game that is played...As you say, "The game is the Teacher"...:wink:
SJD
PS..And yes I agree, mixing sex, with sports should be mandatory !
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My local bar maid's, cheerin' on the AZ Card's !
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CJ, I would like to hear your take on my posts #207 and #230...I place a LOT of emphasis on the actual game that is played...As you say, "The game is the Teacher"...:wink:
SJD
"People Like People Like Themselves" and they enjoy living vicariously through the lives and actions of other people....this is a special, addicting form of entertainment.
I believe the key element that's exciting about pool is the "head to head" competition and battling for that first shot. The "running out" part is pretty routine and more like a "tap in" in golf, essential to show, but not that exciting, certainly not the catalyst.
This is why you like one pocket and why I like "2 Shot Roll Out" 9 Ball, it's the strategy involved to get the shot....the battling back and forth to get the opening.
Buddy Hall told me one time "CJ, you gotta make em wrestle for it...you gotta make em wrestle ya for that first shot"......and Buddy nailed it, that's where the "Golden Nugget" of the game is, just like any other kind of fighting/wrestling/dueling.
What game is played and how it's played is an important factor, however, it's still not the root of the success of pool. The root of the success will be in character building and development. The games aren't exciting in themselves, it's still the people involved and how they play the game....who they really are.....what motivates them.....what their past was.....what makes them "tick"....what special qualities they possess, etc.
TV is the missing component, and the show must be great, with the ideal mixture of personalities, strategic performances, and a Game that brings all this "Cream to the Top".....and as Buddy says {you gotta make sure to} "make em wrestle for it".![]()
'The Game is the Teacher'
"People Like People Like Themselves" and they enjoy living vicariously through the lives and actions of other people....this is a special, addicting form of entertainment.
I believe the key element that's exciting about pool is the "head to head" competition and battling for that first shot. The "running out" part is pretty routine and more like a "tap in" in golf, essential to show, but not that exciting, certainly not the catalyst.
This is why you like one pocket and why I like "2 Shot Roll Out" 9 Ball, it's the strategy involved to get the shot....the battling back and forth to get the opening.
Buddy Hall told me one time "CJ, you gotta make em wrestle for it...you gotta make em wrestle ya for that first shot"......and Buddy nailed it, that's where the "Golden Nugget" of the game is, just like any other kind of fighting/wrestling/dueling.
What game is played and how it's played is an important factor, however, it's still not the root of the success of pool. The root of the success will be in character building and development. The games aren't exciting in themselves, it's still the people involved and how they play the game....who they really are.....what motivates them.....what their past was.....what makes them "tick"....what special qualities they possess, etc.
TV is the missing component, and the show must be great, with the ideal mixture of personalities, strategic performances, and a Game that brings all this "Cream to the Top".....and as Buddy says {you gotta make sure to} "make em wrestle for it".![]()
'The Game is the Teacher'
Jerry is talking about poolrooms.
That 10% drop is about what we lose in poolrooms each year. People who do not have a place to play pool cannot be pool players
We just lost two more long standing rooms from the San Jose area: California Billiards and Shoreline Billiards. I don't worry about rooms that close. Rooms are always closing, even in the best of times. I am very concerned that there are no newly opened rooms. This is a very big problem for our industry.
We just lost two more long standing rooms from the San Jose area: California Billiards and Shoreline Billiards. I don't worry about rooms that close. Rooms are always closing, even in the best of times. I am very concerned that there are no newly opened rooms. This is a very big problem for our industry.
All I can contribute is my own experience...I'm a newbie, although I'm a graybeard.
I went over to my local pool room on a Saturday thinking it might be hard to get a table. Never been there. Couldn't find it, had to call for directions. But the parking lot was 80% empty and it turned out most of the people who were there were drinking at the bar. I walked in and I just stood there. I was actually a little nervous because, you know, I'd never been in a pool hall before. There's a little counter inside the door but no one manning it. Finally after I've stood there for what seemed like a couple of minutes a waitress yells over and asks if I need any help.
I said sure.
A minute or two later she comes over and asks if she can get me anything. I'm standing there holding my newbie cue case. I said I wanted to play pool. She gave me a tray of balls and chalk. Didn't want to make conversation.
In the pool area there are maybe half a dozen bar boxes with three teenage males on one. Over on one of the 10 or 12 9-footers a couple is playing, so I mosey around the perimeter of the room and then sort of stop to watch them. They're having an animated conversation and when they see me they stop and look at me, and I say, "How you doing? Just watching." And the guy looks at me and gives me a good get-the-eff-out-of-here look. So I got out of there quick. I go over on the other side of the room and set up and start to hit balls. A whole hour, nobody comes over, nobody says boo.
In the back of the room the only other players are a younger guy giving an older guy some instruction. After a while the younger guy leaves and the older guy keeps hitting balls, so I sidle over and say, "You want to play a game?" He says "Naw," and right away starts packing up, and leaves.
At the end of my hour I wait by the counter some more until the waitress finally comes over again. She said, "Everything okay?" And I say, "Well, I was hoping to find a game." She says, "It's pretty busy on Tuesdays and Thursdays." I paid for the time and left a tip in the jar.
After a few repeats of this I paid my son's friend to help me clear away a space in the basement and went and bought a nice used pool table. Now I play in my basement. I've been back to the pool hall two or three times and one time, a guy working there was actually halfway friendly, in that he said a few words to me he didn't absolutely have to. I still have never found anybody to play a game with me there, and the three occupied tables I saw there the first Saturday, with me on the fourth, are the busiest I've ever seen the tables. The bar varies in the level of activity you see. Sometimes a middling amount of people, sometimes kind of a lot.
I hit balls in my basement every night. If I gotta play alone anyway....
Here's my opinion: you own a pool room, you do a certain amount of promotion. You advertise, you print flyers, you make a web page. But the point of all that promotion is to get a guy to walk in the front door. That's the payoff. You've got a brand new customer. All your advertising and promotion has succeeded. And then you make him stand there and don't give him the time of day and do nothing to make him feel welcome. And you even make him wait a long time for service even though the place is mostly empty.
Well, that just seems like a problem with the business model.
Of course, that's just one room, and it was just a few occasions. Can't even fault that one room, basically. Maybe I just hit them on a slow...Saturday.