DaveK said:
Here is an intelligent comment :
This IPT looks to be set up as an ENTERTAINMENT endeavor, not a SPORTS endeavour. I would like to see the rules as to the membership in the IPT, some transparency would be nice. Currently there are 150 'selected' players. The criteria for this selection was not ideal in my opinion, but let's grant them their charter membership as a given. Now, how are the 'lowest 50' members screened out ? I would guess by winnings, but I have not seen that clearly stated. Then how do the 'new 50' get selected ? Will the 50 who loose their membership have an opportunity to re-qualify immediately ? After 1 year ? Never again ? If this continues to be the exclusive domain of KT, then there will always be contention as to the members. I would suggest a solid qualification process be established, one that is transparent, cannot be influenced by any subjective criteria, and results in membership being granted for current pool abilities exclusively. That is how tennis and golf work (sponsors exemptions notwithstanding), and they are about the most successful widespread individual professional sports. Surely their models were some that you studied Colin, how would you compare the IPT model to them ?
Dave
I guess that after the first year the process will be pretty simple, if your are in the top 100 you are in and if you are not you aren't.
The only thing that concerns me is the idea that there will be only ONE tournament in order to select a new 50 players. I would start in January and have a tournament every month to get a secondary list of players going with the top 100 players on that tour to compete with the bottom 50 players for the 50 spots on the main tour.
That gives all the players all over the world a chance to compete in the format against the best players who aren't already on the main tour and it sets up a really good qualification process to insure that the very best players are playing.
I would have wild card spots for champions in other disciplines. For example the 3 cushion world champion should have a standing invite, the best English billiards player should get a spot, the world snooker champions should have spots, and the champions of each country should have spots. That would play well on TV for sure. Kind of like Michael Shumacher coming to NASCAR and vice versa.
I figure that with the system I just proposed that second and third tier tournaments will spring up just to feed the main tour. Why not have the qualifying tournaments pay out $10,000 for first? Make the entry fees $300 a tournament, with 300 players, the same format as the IPT itself, and you have $90,000 in entry fees alone to disburse. I guarantee that there would be at least 500 players in this country who would be vying for those spots each month. Local tournament series could have spots in the monthlies as prizes. JUST LIKE POKER - MASS MAKES CLASS.
Poker works because there are thousands of small tournaments, that feed into larger and larger tournaments. It is possible to get to the big show in poker with a $10 investment, time and talent. Theoretically, it ought to be possible to spend $10 in a local pool tournament and from there, to play your way into the big time.
If this were the case then eventually there would be millions of people putting in that $10 every week just to see how far they can get. Right now, hundreds of thousands of people put in $10 bucks a week or more for a shot at going to Vegas and winning $3000. Imagine if the prize was a guaranteed shot at $3,000,000.
John