Exactly. From what I've seen from the answers to my question, making money alone is enough to call it a success. I have always viewed success as accomplishing all of your goals, which is why I don't call the APA a success.
You are basing your opinion of success on their initial reasoning to create a fan base for the profession game.
I actually belive they have done that.
When you factor in all league players, of which the APA is by far the largest, they have in fact built a fan base there are probably close to 500,000 amateur players playing pool now and we have a prety good idea where to find them (legaues, regional tours, national amateur evets). In my opinion, the pro players have not properly used this fan base.
I work as the director of marketing for a company. If I got a list of 500,000 or more potential customers and I was told where to find them and my company made very few or no sales to those people, I would not blame the person who gave me the list, I would blame my sales people for not doing their job.
The fact that the pro game has not grown can not be blamed on the APA or its founders, it should be blamed on the players and the so called associations that have all the info they need to market the game and have been completely unable to do so.
if it were me and I was running a regional tour or a pro event, the first thing i would do is to find all the APA, BCA, VNEA and TAP L.O withing 150 miles and ask if they would put a flier in their envelopes for my event. I would in turn offer free or discounted admission to anyone who holds a membership card from those leagues. The event wins with higher exposure and the L.O. wins a value added benefit to being a member.
Just some thoughts.
Leagueguy