DERBY CITY CLASSIC DRESS CODE

just who is going to come along and make pool so called respectable and put it on tv in prime time.

right now the and for the future, the audience is pool players only at tournaments and streaming. along with many going to regional events.

the dress of the players is not holding anything back at present time. if anything it creates more entries.

It is coming, slowly but surely.

The ass crack crowd bottom feeders will just have to adjust (and cover up) eventually.

Lou Figueroa
 
just who is going to come along and make pool so called respectable and put it on tv in prime time.
Since when was that the goal? What we have seen, however, is that Matchroom, by managing the presentation of both its product and its players well, has been able to partner with some out-of-industry partners in the production of some of its events, including the Mosconi Cup, which about five years ago paid $20,000 to winning team members and $10,000 to losing team members. Now, it has doubled and the winners get $40,000 and the losers get $20,000. Yes, potential sponsors do care about the presentation of the professional pool product, and when they are reeled in, the players make more money.
right now the and for the future, the audience is pool players only at tournaments and streaming. along with many going to regional events.

the dress of the players is not holding anything back at present time. if anything it creates more entries.
There is, perhaps, no event in America that draws more player interest than the Turning Stone Classic, which sometimes fills its field of 128 almost a year in advance. The wait list always has dozens on it, too. The use of a strictly enforced dress code on the Joss Tour, which is probably the most successful regional tour in American history, has hardly turned any would-be entrants away. I think it is just the opposite. It makes players and fans alike more comfortable at a Joss Tour event.
 
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