This isn't true. Some of the big names have clothing sponsors. For the lesser guys, the money and free clothes aren't worth wearing stuff they don't like. The tour has standards, but they don't pay for the players' clothes. The tour doesn't, "drop" players. They play in through winning, mini tours, and Q-school. They get dropped for poor play. The worst the tour will do is tell them to change. Happens to Jason Day sometimes because he has an out there sponsor.in golf all of the tour players are sponsored heavily and make their players wear and act as they want or they drop them.
in pool they barely get traveling expenses for the most part.
That is how I interpreted the dress code. I don't have any problem with having a dress code for pool. I appreciate the effort to clean up the image.Because typically dress codes are minimums. Like in golf you can, as far as I know, step on the first tee of a tour event wearing a shirt and tie like the old days. They wouldn’t make you dress worse. So some tournaments come up with a dress code as you support. But the rule and/ or enforcement is moronic as I said before. If a suit and tie is a dress code violation your dress code is unbelievably stupid.
in golf all of the tour players are sponsored heavily and make their players wear and act as they want or they drop them.
in pool they barely get traveling expenses for the most part.
They have always (or for a long time) had a "code", but they have never (or very rarely) enforced it.DCC now has a dress code of sorts. i've speculated that it was ronnie alcano that was the straw that broke the camel's back (but he was in good company that year) because the year after it was:
All dress items must be neat and not torn. Prohibited: Short pants and distressed/ripped jeans. Backward hats and sagging pants. Any sloppy, dirty ....