Well, in Germany... It's pretty much "always" been like that. In everything. Germans literally have a national organization for any possible sport/hobby you could possibly want to take part in. And those national systems are set up to provide competition for everyone from rank amateurs, up to national level players competing against other countries. It is all patterned off how they do soccer. European countries WANT to develop young talent.. In EVERYTHING. And everything is aimed at that goal.Let’s say you are right….why is it that way in Europe particularly with the private clubs and player development?
what has to happen for this to be true in America? Thx in advance for your thoughts
Local liquor laws are SUPER friendly to this sort of setup, such that local clubs/Vereins can support themselves by liquor/food sales amongst members/visitors.. And business/club zoning laws are not NEARLY as restrictive in Germany.. You don't necessarily "have" to separate businesses from residential areas. This leads to very affordable space for clubs to rent and set up 6-8 tables. Some of the larger clubs actually own their own building, even.
In America, OTOH... Pool is about MONEY, first and foremost. APA.. BCA.. VNEA. Player and youth development is of very little interest to these entities. Local zoning laws are set up to the advantage of big corporations, making sure that businesses find it difficult to set up anywhere close to residential areas, forcing such businesses to larger retail areas, generally a mile or two minimum from the closest dense residential area...
How does America fix this? Simple. Break the hold of APA, BCA, and VNEA on amateur pool.. Getting zoning and liquor laws changed, pretty much everywhere in the country... And people need to start finding cheap space to rent to build out private clubs.
Basically.. Change absolutely everything about how America does pool. Simple Simon.