Well, they certainly didn't act in the manner you portray when they had a tour. The BCA collects dues from its members to support industry, but the name of the group is BILLIARD CONGRESS OF AMERICA. All these years, they are supposed to be the North American representative of professional pool. If they had done their job, what the organization was supposed to do, things might look quite differently today, including the professional player.
Instead, they sold the league system, which could have been one mechanism to cultive pool, dropped the BCA Open tournament for pros, and to be quite honest, I don't understand what the purpose is of the group whatsoever. If it is to support industry members, fine. Then change their name to Billird Industry Members of America.
Currently, on another note, there's a cradle-to-prison pipeline going on in America. One out of every 100 Americans are incarcerated. One-third of American high school studentes will not recieve a high school diploma. The school of thought is to educate our children, provide them a decent environment to learn in, and let them grow up with a foundation to be somebody.
Same holds true for pool. Give the youth something to shoot for. Cultive new American professionals, instead of letting them scramble from coast to coast looking for crumbs to live off of, making savers at tournaments to survive, falling for the stupid Bonus Ball promises, dancing like monkeys, only to get stiffed. They're starved, hungry professional players with no future to look forward to. They're doing what they gotta do to survive.
You always speak from the heart and mind, JAM. I always appreciate your input when others blast the players.
Yes, when the pros were doing well (90s?) everyone was happy.
The bottom line is, however, a true test of character is when things are not going well.
Many posters on here are simply saying the one thing.
When given a chance to prove themselves on a worldwide scale (not talking about the pool skill) the players blow it.
They don't act like pros.