Well said Chris.Yeah, it’s not a good situation for a TD to be in having to deal with Earl. The bottom line is many spectators come to see him play, so for the sake of the promoters, it’s not that simple to DQ him for his misbehavior, without upsetting a lot of people.
Yes, it is a precedent that should have been set with Earl and others many years ago and sounds like Jay tried his best to, but others (possibly Scott Smith) may have put up with a lot more misbehavior from Earl than they should have.
I think it is that simple. There are people that come to see Earl play due to the draw of his controversy, and there are people that come to see top pool played in a professional manner and enjoy a contest of world class skill.
At some point you have to decide what you're promoting. Is this America's Got Talent or the Jerry Springer show? They both draw an audience. But if you allow bullies and confrontational antics to go unchecked then you will turn away some of the folk that want to see a clean game. Even if Jerry Springer has a bigger daytime audience, we have to decide which is more important, the integrity of the game or a few rubberneckers.
My opinion is that if you can't run tournaments that are exciting and popular without using drama as a hook then you are doing something seriously wrong. And I think the TD has an obligation to those who took time and money to participate in the event to protect them from abusive behavior on the part of the other players.