Don Mackey Back?

I'm going to take a shot in the dark on the 2 hidden players. Claude Bernatchez and Reed Pierce :)
 
I suspect the more discerning ex-PBTers in that photo are already asking who owns all those matches that are going to be digitized and how they as individuals stand to make money from them. What, if anything, did it take to get Sigel, Davenport and Pierce to associate their names with this whatever-it-is? I doubt many of the old guard have forgotten the last time Mackey was in charge of marketing them to the world. I remember the year when a lower/middle-tier player named Nikki Benisch earned more on the women's tour than Strickland did on the men's. That was a result of how Mackey handled negotiations with ESPN. Most interesting to me is how Matchroom responds. Are they suddenly facing a more uphill battle to continue monetizing this sport, or is there room for two elephants in the room?
 
There’s already two elephants in the room. One is Matchroom and the other is Predator.

With there being NFTs involved, I’m guessing there were “pie in the sky” dreams as to the money that could be made from content that was just sitting there gathering dust.
With more quality free match content out there than anybody could watch in a lifetime I highly doubt their library of tournament matches is all that valuable. Sure, many people would love to see it, but I doubt many would be willing to pay to see it. I also highly doubt they are going to create new content of such value that they are going to be making a bundle on subscriber income, just too much other free good content out there including instructionals and podcasts etc. Maybe I'm wrong but I feel pretty confident about my guesses.
 
What tournament content does the PBT own that isn’t already part of the AccuStats domain? Just curious,,,
That is a very good question. I don't see any matches in the catalog that are labeled as PBT. Pat would know for sure, but I will be finding out.
 
I'm guessing this picture is from 1992 or earlier as, if memory serves, 1992 was the final year in which Sigel played the full PBT schedule.
That's possible, but he still ranked third on the tour in 1993 behind Archer and Strickland. He dropped to 11th in 1994 and was off the list in 1995.
 
I put the over under on the probilliardstour website going away at 8 months, and no actual content ever made available. Much ado about nothing, IMO.
 
That is a very good question. I don't see any matches in the catalog that are labeled as PBT. Pat would know for sure, but I will be finding out.
Mackey and the PBT likely doesn't "own" any of the PBT matches in a literal sense. It's a near-certainty that Mackey had someone assiduously videotape every PBT match that was broadcasted nationwide.

The broadcasted matches routinely had five commercial breaks -- for region-specific sponsors, as well as billiards-related products of national interest -- per broadcast hour, spaced 12 minutes apart, which usual resulted in missing games in any given hour of action due to network time constraints in a given time slot allotted to billiards.

As to ownership of the raw uncompressed footage (with no missing games), which generally far exceeded an hour, that's what you'll be learning about in your research.

Arnaldo
 
I suspect the more discerning ex-PBTers in that photo are already asking who owns all those matches that are going to be digitized and how they as individuals stand to make money from them. What, if anything, did it take to get Sigel, Davenport and Pierce to associate their names with this whatever-it-is? I doubt many of the old guard have forgotten the last time Mackey was in charge of marketing them to the world. I remember the year when a lower/middle-tier player named Nikki Benisch earned more on the women's tour than Strickland did on the men's. That was a result of how Mackey handled negotiations with ESPN. Most interesting to me is how Matchroom responds. Are they suddenly facing a more uphill battle to continue monetizing this sport, or is there room for two elephants in the room?
Matchroom can't spell PBT. This has got as much chance of taking off as brick. Web pages are cheap.
 
That's a very old picture, but...

Paul Potier
Johnny Archer (nearly hidden)
Jim Rempe (+hidden behind)
Earl Strickland
Kim Davenport
Nick Varner
Mike Sigel (+hidden behind)
David Howard
(unknown in white coat)
Don Mackey
I'm guessing, but it looks like it could be Spanish Mike Lebron behind Rempe and Terry Bell behind Sigel.

Not sure if this is Ronnie Wiseman on the end in the white coat, but I can find out lickedly split on Facebook. Here is Ronnie's PBT photo back in the day.
55.JPG
 
Dan Louie wrote on Facebook that he thinks the player in the white jacket is Scott Kitto. Here is a photo of Scott back then to compare.

123.JPG

BB230077-3288-4115-9B1D-88ABC506D28D.jpeg
 
Don’t think it’s Scott. The eyes look like RW to me. I’ll ask someone who will know. It’s middle of the nite now. Need a few hours. We’ll get this solved. We are pool detectives after all…..


Best
Fatboy<——-self appointed sheriff
 
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