Are you suure he doesn't?Earl already has most of those symptoms, and he doesn't even smoke weed. It would probably be the complete opposite for him. How much you want to bet he would be a calm and cool character if you could get him to burn one.
Are you suure he doesn't?Earl already has most of those symptoms, and he doesn't even smoke weed. It would probably be the complete opposite for him. How much you want to bet he would be a calm and cool character if you could get him to burn one.
I can’t imagine a suspension from WPA events means anything more than not being able to compete in the WPA world championships every year, which very few US players ever bother with participating in anyway.
Start paying them what they deserve for all the work and effort it requires, and then maybe we can hold them to higher standards.There's a bit of irony in all this. Everyone has been saying pool needs to "organize", we need "rules", there needs to be "accountability" in order for pool to be taken seriously and attract large scale sponsors and real money. Here we have the WPA (granted they are worthless) doing exactly this: organizing, putting parameters in place and enforcing when those parameters are breached, yet everyone is upset over it. The rule was established, Billy knew the rule was established and he made a choice to break it. Illegal vs legal is irrelevant. The WPA says they do not want people in their association using marijuana. Billy knew this, agreed to the terms and got caught. Time to pay the piper. In the real world, people are subject to a drug test whether it be during the hiring process or randomly as a condition of employment. Despite being legal in a given state, a positive test for marijuana usually results in being denied employment or loss of job. I don't understand why people think he should not be held accountable for violating the terms of his agreement.
According to an interview, he doesn't. He is a giant health nut. Good for him by the way.Are you suure he doesn't?
I don't see how one correlates to the other. The organization has standards and Billy chose to agree to them and participate then proceeded to break the rules which carries a punishment. Would that change if he made millions per year?Start paying them what they for all the work and effort it requires, and then maybe we can hold them to higher standards.
I think that would also include the US Open since it is sanctioned by the WPA. I’m guessing it may also include anything on the WPA ranking list. If true, that’s a massive blow.The World Championship isn't the only WPA event.
All Matchroom events and pretty much any event with a significant prize fund.
Not being able to play in any of those is a huge dent to any professional pool player.
It's pretty easy... One isn't going to be subject to a drug test, and other ways of climbing up your ass, for a minimum wage job. I certainly wouldn't. I would tell them to get bent.I don't see how one correlates to the other. The organization has standards and Billy chose to agree to them and participate then proceeded to break the rules which carries a punishment. Would that change if he made millions per year?
Lots of jobs (low and high paying) require a drug test as a term of employment. Like you said, it's your choice to accept the terms or seek employment elsewhere. Billy chose to agree to the terms.It's pretty easy... One isn't going to be subject to a drug test, and other ways of climbing up your ass, for a minimum wage job. I certainly wouldn't. I would tell them to get bent.
If you want to hold players to higher standards, you have to treat them like the professionals that they are. Of course that hasn't been done for 25 years.
In terms of the reason for suspension or length of suspension?
I guess we agree to disagree. There has to be standards in place and accountability when those standards are violated. What parents would want their kids involved with a sport that condones drug use at its highest level? I suppose being drunk and assaulting an opponent over a rack disagreement while on a live stream doesn't classify as Earl-like behavior. Pro pool doesn't need more Billy Thorpes, it needs more Chris Reinholds.If I ran the world I wouldn't care what pool players drink/smoke during their free time but would empower tournament directors and referees to boot players if they are disorderly. Pool needs more 20-year old Billy Thorpes and less reliance on senior citizens. Earl is sober (I think) but often behaves worse during play than any pothead or drunk.
OK, my mistake - thanksThe World Championship isn't the only WPA event.
All Matchroom events and pretty much any event with a significant prize fund.
Not being able to play in any of those is a huge dent to any professional pool player.
Did you see the drunken Thorpe video?If I ran the world I wouldn't care what pool players drink/smoke during their free time but would empower tournament directors and referees to boot players if they are disorderly. Pool needs more 20-year old Billy Thorpes and less reliance on senior citizens. Earl is sober (I think) but often behaves worse during play than any pothead or drunk.
I guess we agree to disagree. There has to be standards in place and accountability when those standards are violated. What parents would want their kids involved with a sport that condones drug use at its highest level? I suppose being drunk and assaulting an opponent over a rack disagreement while on a live stream doesn't classify as Earl-like behavior. Pro pool doesn't need more Billy Thorpes, it needs more Chris Reinholds.
Did you see the drunken Thorpe video?
You might reconsider if you do.
There's a bit of irony in all this. Everyone has been saying pool needs to "organize", we need "rules", there needs to be "accountability" in order for pool to be taken seriously and attract large scale sponsors and real money. Here we have the WPA (granted they are worthless) doing exactly this: organizing, putting parameters in place and enforcing when those parameters are breached, yet everyone is upset over it. The rule was established, Billy knew the rule was established and he made a choice to break it. Illegal vs legal is irrelevant. The WPA says they do not want people in their association using marijuana. Billy knew this, agreed to the terms and got caught. Time to pay the piper. In the real world, people are subject to a drug test whether it be during the hiring process or randomly as a condition of employment. Despite being legal in a given state, a positive test for marijuana usually results in being denied employment or loss of job. I don't understand why people think he should not be held accountable for violating the terms of his agreement.
Did you see the drunken Thorpe video?If I ran the world I wouldn't care what pool players drink/smoke during their free time but would empower tournament directors and referees to boot players if they are disorderly. Pool needs more 20-year old Billy Thorpes and less reliance on senior citizens. Earl is sober (I think) but often behaves worse during play than any pothead or drunk.
Pretty sure any pool player would sell their Olympic medal for 2k or less....Fair enough. But the pool-in-tuxedos approach failed the game for 50 years. I read a few minutes ago that the WPA applies these rules because it's mandatory for sports that want Olympic recognition. That's a least a reason for all of this if that's the plan for professional pool. Online sports betting would be my plan like Snooker has in the UK.