Pool has never been a big TV sport in the US and probably never will be. I don't think making pro pool any easier will get more eyeballs. The best players in the world actually do make pool look easy.You can set the conditions so that the top few win at the highest percentage possible. Or you can have more balanced competition, more parity, and the money getting spread around a little. The idea is that the popularity and profitability put more money in the top players’ pockets over time. The top guys still win more and place higher more. Regardless of conditions they still do well. If you want the sport to get more eyeballs, you need more parity. The NFL is the poster child for this. Everything is set up to make it difficult to dominate. The best organizations and teams still do better, but they have to have key players and really do a partial rebuild every offseason. But multiple fan bases have teams that can at least get to the playoffs.
Football is obviously different from pool. But pretty much any team sport/ league has to balance the competition. In that sense it isn’t pure. But it is more entertaining and profitable than it would otherwise be.
The difficult conditions will more accurately and consistently identify the very best players. OK. But if that is all there is, it won’t be popular or Provide the best players more money in the long run. the Ultimate Pool set up is an example. It was more than OK that our Easy E could prevail over Bergman. Short races on normal to easy equipment have their place In the scheme of things and make for better viewing.
But if MR could just capture a tiny percentage of the American public, that's still a lot of eyeballs and money.
In any case, the bigger potential audience is, of course, overseas, especially in Asia.
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Does pool need more parity? I'd argue it already does.
Consider the winner of all the big Matchroom Open tournaments (256 players) since 2022. There has only been one repeat winner:
Johan Chua
Fedor Gorst
Mickey Krause
Robbie Capito
Jayson Shaw
Ko Ping Chung
David Alcaide
Dang Jin Hu
Eklent Kaci
Francisco Sanchez Ruiz
Joshua Filler
Alban Ouschan
Francisco Sanchez Ruiz
Shane Van Boening
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The NFL, for all the talk of parity, actually has a top-heavy history.
Just nine teams have won 32 of the 58 NFL Super Bowls (58%).
Just four teams have won 22 of the 58 SBs (38%).
NBA is no different. Nine of 32 teams have the last 25 championships. The Celtics and Lakers have won 35 of 77 titles (45%).