jason said:
This thread wasn't started to argue about Earls attitude or shooting ability. It was intended to discuss positive thought provoking ideas about making the sport better for everyone.
I guess pool is doomed. lol
Well Jason the point I raise about Earl is that instead of the pool fraternity using Earl as a cornerstone, like Sears in a shopping mall, to draw fans to the game, they turn their back on him and put him down. The more paying customers Earl brings to a game the more there is for the other players. but the players really do not care about whether there are fans or not.
I don't know Earl, spoke to him once, saw him play in person twice, on TV many times, but I haven't seen him do anything really outrageous. Nothing that some of the other players don't also do.
Keep in mind that when a room owner turns over ten tables for a tournament he is losing money. At $4 per person x 2 at a table x 10 tables x 10 hours that is $800 lost revenue for one day to the room owner. Hopefully he makes it up with food and drink sales bought by the fans the players attract. The pros normally just drink water.
And I sure would not recommend pool to anyone as a lifelong ambition. In pool the past is meaningless - a person is only as good as his current game. You have a bad day and there is no payday. Plus you have to dole out the expenses before the match begins and it is very common to have negative paydays. How many people will go to their job if they do not get paid? Would you? I sure wouldn't. How many workers will go to their job and pay the boss for the honor of working for him? That is just what a lot of the pros do.
And they have to finish in the top ten percent to earn a decent day's pay.
And every match can be a gut wrenching battle which can make the difference between profit or loss for the player.
The pros want to be on TV but they don't realize that the people over at ESPN and SUN aren't stupid. If the pros can't draw fans to a live tournament then what makes them think that the fans will watch them on TV? And if nobody watches them on TV then why would ESPN or SUN want to bother with them? Unlike Pool players the people at ESPN and SUN want to be paid for their services. The bottom line is veryimportant to them.
So, when all is said and done, I tend to agree with you that pool is most likely going to stay as it is going nowhere soon. Just too much negative talk. And the players have themselves to thank for that.
At least the women do have a pro structure in place where they classify who is a pro and how they have to earn the title of pro. And they are on TV regularly. And they know how to market themselves. But, unfortunately when you look at the list of women pros, who really cares about any of them except for those who appear on TV. And that is usually the top ten.
Jake