Not at all.... all tables promote people playing.
If this is some whine about the state of US pool and the Mosconi pick...
Let's put things into perspective vs. the rest of the World.
All major cities in the US have poolhalls.
9ft tables, 8ft, 7ft etc.
You have 3 major leagues, with hundreds of thousands of players.
There are thousands of tournaments going on all over the country.
The US should be a breeding ground for new talent.
So, it has nothing to do with what equipment is being used.
Zero.
Nada.
You have other sports with millions of dollars put into it.
Gov grants, scholarships etc as well.
Paths to train juniors, to professional level.
Where is that in Pool in the US????
That is the problem.
What is the BCA doing exactly?
Go and have a good hard look at yourselves around the support the game gets for creating a career for players.
There you shall find the problem to solve.
Good luck, and Team Europe will have field day.
I have stated my opinion before on what is holding back pool in America, but I will summarize again...
All sports/competitive ventures have one thing in common. They need young blood in order to both develop talent, and to market that talent to the public.
Where can young people in America play, again? Not in bars. Not in any pool hall that sells alcohol. Which is prolly one of the few profitable ways to run a pool hall.
Young males are much more likely to want to compete at SOMETHING when they hit puberty, because of the excess testosterone... So each sport / competitive venture has a short window to "capture" these young talents. If a young man can't get into a pool hall to be exposed to the game, then what are they gonna do? Stay at home and compete at video games, for nothing more than the cost of a PC or a gaming console, the price of a single game, and possibly a small monthly fee?
That is EXACTLY what they do. The fall of pool in America came almost exactly when competitive video gaming began to rise.
The fall of pool in America is directly attributable to the fact that young boys 13-14 have no structured way to be exposed to the game at that age, due to governmental regulation that prevents them from going to the places competitive pool is played. BCA can't do jack crap about that, unless they are gonna pay for 4 table rooms to be installed at schools, and then allow good adult players to come in and play with the kids. Yeahhhhh.. Good luck widdat.
Europe has a massive advantage over us in this, as pool is structured around private clubs, that as a general rule, allow kids in even if the club serves alcohol. Plus, our American "league" system is NOTHING like Europe's. America's league system is not about competition. It's about making money.
In Europe, kids, if they are good enough, have a direct path towards playing against top pros. In Germany, if you work your way up from Kreisliga as an abject beginner, through Landesliga, Verbandsliga, Oberliga.... Then you have the opportunity to move up to Bundesliga, where you play guys like Filler.
The problem with American pool is it was never about building talent. It's about money. Which is NOT what pool in Europe is about.