For the last several years, after each Mosconi Cup loss, there have been very knowledgeable people on these forums pontificate at length on how the U.S. can no longer compete with the Europeans.
A variety of excuses have been put forth: the number of tournaments played on bar boxes, not fundamentally sound, lack of an established u.s. tour, too much emphasis placed on gambling matches, no amateur involvement, the list was long and varied.
Even this year, after the U.S. team beat the Russian team and the British team, there were several on here who downplayed the achievement. There were threads that argued against the efficacy of the boot camps, and Johan as a coach.
What I saw this week ( and even earlier at the us open), was a group of U.S. players that can compete with anyone on any given day. Cory even had a FB post from before he was even on the team that basically said (paraphrasing here) "don't believe all the experts who say the Americans cant compete internationally, the Americans have been beating them in tournaments all year."
So, my question, do ya'll think this win is a re- assertion of Americans as a legitimate force in professional pool for the next decade, or was it a fluke? Because at the end of the day, many of the things that folks were saying were holding the Americans back are still there. They still play a ton of bar box tourneys, they still like to gamble, for the most part they don't travel to international competitions, etc.
A variety of excuses have been put forth: the number of tournaments played on bar boxes, not fundamentally sound, lack of an established u.s. tour, too much emphasis placed on gambling matches, no amateur involvement, the list was long and varied.
Even this year, after the U.S. team beat the Russian team and the British team, there were several on here who downplayed the achievement. There were threads that argued against the efficacy of the boot camps, and Johan as a coach.
What I saw this week ( and even earlier at the us open), was a group of U.S. players that can compete with anyone on any given day. Cory even had a FB post from before he was even on the team that basically said (paraphrasing here) "don't believe all the experts who say the Americans cant compete internationally, the Americans have been beating them in tournaments all year."
So, my question, do ya'll think this win is a re- assertion of Americans as a legitimate force in professional pool for the next decade, or was it a fluke? Because at the end of the day, many of the things that folks were saying were holding the Americans back are still there. They still play a ton of bar box tourneys, they still like to gamble, for the most part they don't travel to international competitions, etc.