I think he is just saying APA players have been playing by bad rules for so long its made their game soft. I would have to agree.
It's pretty easy to make an empty statement like that. Watch...
APA players have been playing by good rules for so long it's made their game stronger.
See? Anyone can say something like that. Put some meat behind it - explain how those "bad" rules would make someone's game soft. I don't think you can do it.
Here's the basis for my statement. Consider the "bad" rules that have been mentioned in this thread - "call nothing", "take what you make on the break", "mark your pocket on the 8-Ball". (Did I forget any?)
I'll toss out marking the pocket right now. The sole purpose of that rule is to avoid arguments. It has no effect whatsoever on a player's game.
That leaves "call nothing" and "take what you make on the break". Since nobody makes slop on purpose (hence the name "slop"), I don't think you can say playing in a framework where slop counts makes you more sloppy. Not even beginners. But for non-beginners, you have to take into account the fact that your opponent could make some luck shots, and you have to step your game up so that the occasional luck shot won't hurt you. The same is true for "take what you make on the break." It doesn't make the game easier (which would be necessary to soften one's game), it makes the game
harder. It's beginner-friendly because the beginners don't break much, so making it harder for those who do break is a good thing.
So there you have it. The "bad" APA rules make the game harder for the better players, so over time their games get stronger, not softer.
The APA folks can say their rules are for beginners, but really the rules are what they are to make money and the money is making the APA blind to the fact that plenty of their rules are bad for pool on a large scale.
Again, an empty statement. Please clarify which of the rules are bad for pool?
The APA is so big in my county that it crowds out the better leagues. The better players either travel to the next county or gamble on their own. (
Did you just say the "better" leagues can't compete with APA? If that's true, why do you think they're better?
Players have a choice - nobody puts a gun to their head and tells them which league to play in. They CHOOSE APA. Give them a little credit for recognizing where they get the most value for their entertainment dollar.
Its really as simple as the greed of a few is ruining the game we all love.:
Another empty statement. Can you explain what you mean by greed and how that ruins the game, or is this just another pot shot at APA? Oh, and don't forget - most of the other leagues are for-profit business ventures, too.
One time, one of my players looked at me and said "You know, you've done more for pool here in the past five years than anybody ever did in the previous fifty." Me. The guy who runs his league as a business, for profit. That was several years ago, and there were other leagues here when I started. I look around today and see a lot more good players than there were when I started. These people were all here then - they just didn't play pool. Now they do, and some of them are really good. How can that be bad for the sport?