Maybe that's what a young up and comer needs...the fans to get excited about them. As prevalent as social media is with the young folks, it has to be discouraging to constantly read how they can't compete and how bad US pool is. I'm not suggesting that they need sunshine pumped up their arse, but if they see people taking an interest and getting excited, it may just be the push they need to get to that next level.I think the gap between the US and the rest is widening.
Aside for the two inactive players (Dechaine/Bergman), the US has just two of the top ninety players based on Fargo Rate. Yes, SVB and Skyler are threats to win at a moment's notice. In Matchroom majors, Shane had a gold and a silver in 2022 and a bronze in 2023 and Skyler had two bronzes in 2023. Either might snap off a title, but neither is under 30 years old. To me, there's no consolation in the fact that America's top two remain outstanding players,
Yes, the US has a few up and coming young players, but I refuse to get excited about any young player of any nationality until they reach Fargo 750, and the Top 100 players all have a Fargo of 780, which is, perhaps, the new benchmark for world class nine ball.
Time will tell, but I think Filler and Gorst are generational talents. Although, I mentioned a couple of years ago during Filler's run that you never know how people will react when "life" kicks in. Marriage, kids, mortgages, businesses...all take their toll and it will be interesting to see if these under 25's stay dominant into their 30'sIn contrast, Europe has 22 year old Pehlivanovic (silver at the World Games and silver at the World 8-ball) at 807, 23 year old Gorst at 839, 23 year old Aleksa Pecelj at 793 (bronze in this year's US Open 9-ball), 24 year old Kaci at 830, 25 year old Pijus Labutis (bronze at the Spanish Open) at 791 and 25 year old Josh Filler at 844. Which Americans of 25 and under are achieving anything close to what these Europeans have already accomplished? Do any of the 25 and under Americans look like they can have results like these? We shall see, but it's hard to be optimistic.
Good post, and I certainly don't disagree with the summation, I'm just more of a glass half full guy. If you look at the state of American Tennis (Men's) today, many young fans would NEVER believe that a couple decades ago Americans were holding their own and even dominating. McEnroe, Connors, Agassi, Sampras....then we entered a dark period (with the exception of maybe Andy Roddick.)A 25-and-under Mosconi Cup would be far less competitive than the current version. Who exactly does the US want to put up against Filler, Kaci, Gorst, Pehlivanoic and Pacelj?
To get the ball rolling, America needs to own the size of the gap rather than live in denial.
Tennis has huge purses, great sponsorship, youth programs out the wazoo, and is on TV weekly. All the things we say pool needs to get American kids to play, yet we still can't compete with the Europeans currently (at least in Men's Tennis). Why?
Everything cycles in athletics. The Yankees dominate for a decade, and then can't win anything for a decade...and on and on.
Americans will be back on top in the tennis and pool worlds at some point...just hope it's in my lifetime.
