Best post in the thread! Most accurate post in the thread, as well. :smile:
I agree with Jam and the post....
Best post in the thread! Most accurate post in the thread, as well. :smile:
Just in case anyone missed it hatch and Morris had to break some kind of record for saying **** on LIVE TV while REPRESENTING THE USA. I like Rodney and I really like Dennis but what they did dug their own grave as far as I'm concerned. You can't embarrass your country like that on the biggest stage pool has and not expect something in return. They were a total disgrace. I was embarassed while I watched it.
Let's state this right, he's not writing out checks to Rodney per say. He is writing out
checks to all who finish in the money. If Rodney or any other player has a couple of bad days at a tournament, they get nothing except a sh*t load of expenses.
I know it sounds good for your argument to say that, but fact is fact.
It's Mark's tournament and he can do what he likes, personally I would have
suspended Rodney for a couple of tournaments, and had a sit down with him.
I THINK THIS WHOLE TO DO ABOUT POOL BEING IN THE SHAPE IT IS
BECAUSE OF THE PLAYERS IS ABSURD.
People are grasping at straws as to the problems with Pool, and the players are an easy target as their association is weak because they don't stand together as one.
The powers that be the BCA sit in the back ground and seem to get no heat at all.
While they don't lift a finger to help Professional Pool. If the finger pointers need someone to point a finger at they should start here.
This thread has turned into a joke in my opinion, a long with all the others where people are using the players as a scape goat.
Let Mark do what he wants and I wish him success. While I may not like or agree with the Rodney situation, I would have to say Mark runs his events professionally.
As far as the other big names in the industry, they should work together, not each going their own way.
I THINK THIS WHOLE TO DO ABOUT POOL BEING IN THE SHAPE IT IS BECAUSE OF THE PLAYERS IS ABSURD.
We know that having ALL the matches with top grade players adds to the excitement, and one match at a time lends itself to television or streaming. A field full of no-names is just not attractive to an audience, live or online. Matchroom got this right year ago and now we're figuring it out here.
QUOTE]
I remember an interview with a TOP player, I think maybe SVB. The player's opinion was that he did not think it was right that he had to play these no name players. I think he is right. They haven't earned the privilege. No names sign up for tournaments just to say you get to play with the best, but they have no business being on the same table as the pros...unless it's a small local tourney or a gambling session.
They haven't earned the privilege. No names sign up for tournaments just to say you get to play with the best, but they have no business being on the same table as the pros.
First, let me note that I'm referring to men's pool in America only.
I'll respectfully disagree. Obviously, many share the blame in why pool has fallen on such times, but to me, the players themselves have done the greatest damage.
When there were tours to which you had to qualify, had to pay dues, and had to adhere to a code of conduct, the players tended to police themselves, and were, for the most part, in it for each other. Together, they kept the pro pool product tidy and respectable, one that they could sell to venue sponsors.
When that era was replaced by the "all you have to do is show up and you can play in most of the best events era," players should have continued to police themselves but didn't, and as a group, they showed less and less dignity in competition, devaluing the professional pool product. No longer official business partners of the promoters, investors, and would-be investors in pool, way too many players behaved with a sense of entitlement that defied logic, particularly when it came to matters involving either the WPBL or the ABP.
Some promoters washed their hands of dealing with the players, but we are all lucky that a few did not. Who can blame the promoters who sat the middle ground and said "I'll still do events but I'll limit field size and, if necessary, I'll decide which players will maximize the quality of my product?"
The players, through deplorable conduct, brought much of this upon themselves. In 2013, there were five major "show up and you get to play" events in rotation pool on the American pool calendar that had a first prize of at least $10,000: Derby City 9-Ball, Southern Classic 9-ball, Ultimate 10-ball, BCAPL 10-ball, and US Open 9-ball. This year, the promoter of the Ultimate 10-ball cut ties with professional pool, the Southern Classic is no longer on the American pool calendar, the BCAPL 10-ball event is an invitational, and the US Open 9-ball event has a limited field, leaving the Derby City 9-ball event as the only big purse unlimited field event in American pro pool.
The players, as a group, forced the hands of the promoters in many ways, and while some of the blame for the pro pool product's decline lies elsewhere, the players, as a group, must hold themselves accountable for much of what has transpired.
When that era was replaced by the "all you have to do is show up and you can play in most of the best events era," players should have continued to police themselves but didn't, and as a group, they showed less and less dignity in competition, devaluing the professional pool product. No longer official business partners of the promoters, investors, and would-be investors in pool, way too many players behaved with a sense of entitlement that defied logic, particularly when it came to matters involving either the WPBL or the ABP.
Some promoters washed their hands of dealing with the players, but we are all lucky that a few did not. Who can blame the promoters who sat the middle ground and said "I'll still do events but I'll limit field size and, if necessary, I'll decide which players will maximize the quality of my product?"
In 2013, there were five major "show up and you get to play" events in rotation pool on the American pool calendar that had a first prize of at least $10,000: Derby City 9-Ball, Southern Classic 9-ball, Ultimate 10-ball, BCAPL 10-ball, and US Open 9-ball. This year, the promoter of the Ultimate 10-ball cut ties with professional pool, the Southern Classic is no longer on the American pool calendar, the BCAPL 10-ball event is an invitational, and the US Open 9-ball event has a limited field, leaving the Derby City 9-ball event as the only big purse unlimited field event in American pro pool.
The players, as a group, forced the hands of the promoters in many ways, and while some of the blame for the pro pool product's decline lies elsewhere, the players, as a group, must hold themselves accountable for much of what has transpired.
First, let me note that I'm referring to men's pool in America only.
I'll respectfully disagree. Obviously, many share the blame in why pool has fallen on such times, but to me, the players themselves have done the greatest damage.
When there were tours to which you had to qualify, had to pay dues, and had to adhere to a code of conduct, the players tended to police themselves, and were, for the most part, in it for each other. Together, they kept the pro pool product tidy and respectable, one that they could sell to venue sponsors.
When that era was replaced by the "all you have to do is show up and you can play in most of the best events era," players should have continued to police themselves but didn't, and as a group, they showed less and less dignity in competition, devaluing the professional pool product. No longer official business partners of the promoters, investors, and would-be investors in pool, way too many players behaved with a sense of entitlement that defied logic, particularly when it came to matters involving either the WPBL or the ABP.
Some promoters washed their hands of dealing with the players, but we are all lucky that a few did not. Who can blame the promoters who sat the middle ground and said "I'll still do events but I'll limit field size and, if necessary, I'll decide which players will maximize the quality of my product?"
The players, through deplorable conduct, brought much of this upon themselves. In 2013, there were five major "show up and you get to play" events in rotation pool on the American pool calendar that had a first prize of at least $10,000: Derby City 9-Ball, Southern Classic 9-ball, Ultimate 10-ball, BCAPL 10-ball, and US Open 9-ball. This year, the promoter of the Ultimate 10-ball cut ties with professional pool, the Southern Classic is no longer on the American pool calendar, the BCAPL 10-ball event is an invitational, and the US Open 9-ball event has a limited field, leaving the Derby City 9-ball event as the only big purse unlimited field event in American pro pool.
The players, as a group, forced the hands of the promoters in many ways, and while some of the blame for the pro pool product's decline lies elsewhere, the players, as a group, must hold themselves accountable for much of what has transpired.
This thread is not evidence of anything but American (and therefore western world) pools fall into complete obscurity....
And while I am ranting, facebook is much like the invitational tournaments in it's nature. Sure, you get to hear what the players think and everyone can see what is going on, but anything remotely unpleasant or challenging is simply being cut away. No need to answer any tough questions, just unfriend the people asking or censor them. I for one, do not find the gossip among the players particularly interesting. If an idea or statement can't be challenged openly, it is in my opinion of no value....
And regarding the CSI/Morris issue, (which seems to be the fallback citation of everyone who wants to paint pool players in a negative light) A derogatory "F" book post? Really? In the real world, is that even "a thing"?
Not being a devotee of "F" book, I have no idea what was said [by Rodney]...
I prefer not to support an organization that censors its critics, and I encourage others to do the same. Where does that sort of behavior end?