Yes, I think you are right --- make that I know you are right. And so am I.Well most pool pros would definitely disagree with your opinion but you are surely entitled to one![]()
This is a case where what the majority of the pros want does not serve the game's best interests. Very few pros want a shot clock, either. Most of them still want rack your own in all situations. Most of them would rather not have a dress code, too. Rest assured, the soft break had many advocates among the pro players back in 2000-02, as well, but event producers learned that the fans didn't like it.
I post as a serious fan who attends countless big events and watches the stream of many other events. Thankfully, many tournament producers and directors have come to understand in full that the fans prefer refereed matches in which the referees rack the balls, and of the four mega-events with highly diverse international fields in our sport (WPC, US Open, China Open, All Japan), only the China Open has the refs rack with the template on a streamed match.
Thankfully for pool's fans, the majority of which watch pool only on the internet stream or TV, it is Matchroom steering pro pool's ship right now, and more than any event producer that I've encountered in my 45 years around pro pool, they are tailoring their pro pool product to giving fans what their market research shows they want.
The template still has its place in our game where rack your own is unavoidable due to the impracticality and cost of having a referee at every table. The template protects players from the rack mechanics and the pattern rackers, who, by my reckoning, number in the hundreds.
It is, no doubt, a debate for the ages. Thanks for sharing your point of view. Your posts are always well informed and insightful.
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