The ad for the Big Orange Classic is shown below...
Big Orange Classic II - $5000 guaranteed.
Breakers Sports Bar and Grill is hosting its 2nd Big Orange Classic in Knoxville, TN on Oct. 29, 30 & 31. The last Big Orange Classic was won by Rodney Morris. The player auction raised over $14,500. The format is a race to 9, double elimination. Entry fee is $75.00. Also, we have added a Golf Tournament the following Monday Nov. 1st. (A,B,C,D Man Teams) $300 Entry Fee per team. Cash and Prizes given away. For More information contact Wes (865-688-6475) or Shannon Daulton (865-850-4572).
...Turns out that when you get there, pay your entry and settle in to play your matches, the $5000 magically disappears. 64 players showed up - the entry fee was $75 - that totals $4800, but there was only $5100 in the total purse. Thus the house ended up adding $300 to the tournament prize fund. Expanation given was that all they (the house) were doing was guaranteeing that there would be $5000 in the prize fund, NOT guaranteeing to add $5000 to the entries.
Seems to me that this is the kind of 'fine print' advertising of which we have had too much in pool over the years.
Here are some other interesting observations:
- the tournament started Friday night. That night (a busy night for the room) spectators were forced to pay an admission charge, as indeed they were all weekend. I'm not sure what it was but I'm sure it totalled more than $300.
- The cash and prizes giveaways were nowhere to be seen. A cue was raffled off one time Friday night, but it wasn't much of a cue, and who knows who won
- The tables were total crap - 4x8's of indeterminate origin. They had not been recovered in many months. The cloth was poorly installed and very slow. Most of the tables were far from level and many had dead rails.
In short, it was a big ripoff. The policy is this - host a tournament that doesn't cost you a nickel, but draws a big number of top players because it appears rich, then have a big calcutta (from which you extract a percentage), charge admission, maybe sell a couple of vendor booths, then hype it up as some kind of great event. Maybe make some fast money. No reason to spend any excess money on getting the tables done or adding to the prize fund. Repeat the process as often as possible.
Big Orange Classic II - $5000 guaranteed.
Breakers Sports Bar and Grill is hosting its 2nd Big Orange Classic in Knoxville, TN on Oct. 29, 30 & 31. The last Big Orange Classic was won by Rodney Morris. The player auction raised over $14,500. The format is a race to 9, double elimination. Entry fee is $75.00. Also, we have added a Golf Tournament the following Monday Nov. 1st. (A,B,C,D Man Teams) $300 Entry Fee per team. Cash and Prizes given away. For More information contact Wes (865-688-6475) or Shannon Daulton (865-850-4572).
...Turns out that when you get there, pay your entry and settle in to play your matches, the $5000 magically disappears. 64 players showed up - the entry fee was $75 - that totals $4800, but there was only $5100 in the total purse. Thus the house ended up adding $300 to the tournament prize fund. Expanation given was that all they (the house) were doing was guaranteeing that there would be $5000 in the prize fund, NOT guaranteeing to add $5000 to the entries.
Seems to me that this is the kind of 'fine print' advertising of which we have had too much in pool over the years.
Here are some other interesting observations:
- the tournament started Friday night. That night (a busy night for the room) spectators were forced to pay an admission charge, as indeed they were all weekend. I'm not sure what it was but I'm sure it totalled more than $300.
- The cash and prizes giveaways were nowhere to be seen. A cue was raffled off one time Friday night, but it wasn't much of a cue, and who knows who won
- The tables were total crap - 4x8's of indeterminate origin. They had not been recovered in many months. The cloth was poorly installed and very slow. Most of the tables were far from level and many had dead rails.
In short, it was a big ripoff. The policy is this - host a tournament that doesn't cost you a nickel, but draws a big number of top players because it appears rich, then have a big calcutta (from which you extract a percentage), charge admission, maybe sell a couple of vendor booths, then hype it up as some kind of great event. Maybe make some fast money. No reason to spend any excess money on getting the tables done or adding to the prize fund. Repeat the process as often as possible.