Matt has made three posts in this thread about the relatively low quality of play.
But everything is relative. Poorly compared to what? Compared to elite international players at the peak of their game (this seemed to be the comparison in his first post)? Compared to Chris/Oscar on their best day and on new cloth and soft equipment?
Maybe he's right, and he's pointing out that they performed below their typical level and it was a grind session. But more and more these days as we get inundated with Matchroom streams showing the top 10 players in the finals when they're having their best day, and with social media highlight reels, it is easy to have our standards influenced a bit on the unrealistic side. The same way that young girls develop impossible beauty standards because everyone they see online is filtered to look like a goddess and that's now what they see when they look in the mirror.
I haven't played as many money matches as either of these two but I've been in the ring and a lot of the time it isn't pretty, it's gritty. I have one match that was streamed and it was super tough. 10 ball and balls weren't going on the break for a number of reasons. Totally different game than when you make 1-3 balls and everything floats apart. We were on a pool room table with worn cloth, 10 balls with clusters and problems, and there was a lot of running three balls and getting into moving battles again. In those circumstances it's hard to get a rhythm and opportunities that might seem routine when you are in gear can be tough, especially under the lights. Anyway, I won this match and afterwards everyone was really critical of me and basically said I won because my opponent played bad. Which may be true, but part of the reason he played bad is because I starved him of the opportunities he needed to get anything going.
In short, good and bad is all relative, and most of what we see is pretty good when we let go of perfection as the standard. Just my two cents.