Many years ago as a kid, Skyler Woodward approached a very well known veteran pro player from his hometown to help him with his game, and was flat out rejected. I've heard many firsthand accounts that since then, that as a result of that memory, Skyler will always go out of his way to spend time helping young players he comes across at pool halls and tournament venues with their games.
I wonder how that veteran pro player feels now about how he treated Skyler, or whether since that time he has worked any with Skyler? Bottom line, as a result of his memory of how he was treated, it obviously made a huge impression on Skyler NOT to repeat the same mistake / attitude that was shown him in regards to helping young players with their game.
That player probably never gave it a second thought, Chris. At least not until the "kid" turned out to be a world-class player. And even then, he probably never even thought twice about it. That's precisely the point I was making about the players *I* asked as a kid. That was the norm for the times... "Figure it out on your own, kid... nobody ever showed ME anything either."