Which is the problem with having calcuttas. If you want to gamble on a player, help yourself but they don't and shouldn't care about you and your bet.
Maybe next time he will go for $35...
Generally speaking, calcuttas are a way for the pool sweaters, railbirds, attendees, whatever you want to call them, to be a part of the action.
A pool competitor, in my opinion, does not owe anything to a calcutta process. He does, however, owe something to the tournament itself.
Forfeiting happens. It's an unfortunate situation, but in order to be fair, it is a rule that should be applied to all competitors in the tournament. Some pool super stars who shall go unnamed seem to be exempt from the almighty forfeit. I'm not glad that Darren got forfeited, but I am glad to see the rule was applied, the way it should be, with no favoritism.
With that said, this tournament should have never had matches going until 1 a.m. and expect the competitor to show up at 10 a.m. for their match the next day. That is poor planning. I've been to many tournaments just like this. Usually, it is the pool room owner wanting to get the tournament over with because he's losing table time. I get that. He's already losing money hosting the tournament, most likely, and hopes to make it up in drinks and food. I'm not sure.
I have never in my life seen a bunch of people rip somebody apart like this for accidentally sleeping late. It is quite obvious Darren didn't do it deliberately, but on AzBilliards, Darren is a real bad guy. Let's continue to rip him a new one. Only on AzBilliards.