Nit said:
If you are joe average american citizen, living in middle to upper middle class neighborhoods or above, (which is the vast majority of the poplulation) I have a question for you. How many of your neighbors leave their house with their cue over their shoulder to play pool league on any given night?
The answer percentage wise is less than 1% and probably less than .1%.
Yet it's very common to see golfers and bowlers leave with their equipment.
Several reasons apply, not the least of which is there is no marketing to get them into pool. Probably because we don't like ourselves. We can't justify spending the money when we already know the result.
But, the main reason is because they don't like what they see when they try. And, I'm not referring to the quality or look of the room.
I also don't think it's a big table v small table issue.
Hey, nice room ... you related to Teacherman ?
I am not 'joe average american citizen' , I am Canadian (hey, that's catchy, it would make a good beer commercial).
Here there might be more participation in bowling leagues than pool leagues, but not a significant difference (my opinion, no real data). Just out of curiosity most of these bowlers do not have holes in their balls (a little 5 pin vs 10 pin joke, but I digress). You see lots of golfers in the summer, and almost as many
curlers in the winter. My point is that there are differences in the games people play, and this must be recognized (ie don't assume that the scene in St.L. is indicative of the world, it is not).
Now, why do bar leagues exist at all ? Well, they do promote the leagues around here. The VNEA leagues in Alberta and Saskaktchewan are run by an outfit called Southern Music (out of Calgary). Their business is in renting out entertainment items to bars and restaurants. The name I believe comes from their original products, juke boxes. They and the bars attempt to make money from having a Valley pool table in the joint. To help this for-profit situation Southern Music promotes VNEA league play, it's good for their business and good for the bars business. Is it good for 'pool' ? I'm not sure they care, nor do the have any vested interest in 'pool'. If they were a publicly traded company I cannot see their shareholders caring about 'pool' over profits. In general I believe that some good comes from bar leagues, it is often times an introduction to someone who becomes more serious about the game. Of course for most it is just a form of recreation, they have no desire to try to make their living from the game nor to study the game to any degree.
And on the other side, by this same profit-motivated argument I could see how a pool room owner would want to make more money by taking bar-league participants and having them come to the pool hall instead. To that end they will promote their leagues and try to differentiate themselves from bar leagues.
I agree that the quality of pool as a game/sport is better in a pool hall compared to a bar-room. It has a lot to do with the demographics of the players IMO. If there were no bar-leagues then a significant portion of that demographic would quit playing leagues rather than go play at a pool hall, it's not what interests them. Are these people bad for pool ? Na, they're just annoying to some (and fish to others). The people who are more serious about the game of pool will gravitate to the pool halls. These are the types of people who do things like become members of AZBilliards, well the computer types might ... a computer-type casual bar-league player is not likely to be a member here, they do not take it seriously enough.
In a nutshell, these leagues are motivated by profits. Might that be your underlying concern as well NIT ?
Dave
PS, the answer to an earlier question like 'what game is as accessible as pool' might be shuffleboard. There are many bars in the Canadian prairies where the shuffleboard table is busier than the pool table. The quality of play and the, um, 'incentives' would cover a similar range compared to bar pool as well. I wonder when some savy promoter will create a million dollar professional shuffleboard tour ?