Neil said:Back in the early 80's you could go to a bar, play a game for $10, win a couple of games and leave. Then you went down the street to the next bar and did the same. You hit 5 bars a night, you could pocket $100, and nobody was the wiser. You didn't fleece anybody. You never took more than 10 off anybody, and they were more than willing to play for that. Nobody got hurt, and the players could make some money. $100 was good money back then.
Last money game I got in a bar ,(true bar, not poolroom /bar) the guy asked me to play. It cost .75 to play a game. I knew he stood no chance against me, but he didn't know me. I was feeling really generous and told him we could play for a dollar. He actually told me he didn't want to bet that much!!!!! That's about when I quit going to the bars. I wasn't sure whether to just sit down and cry- mourning the loss of a good and faithful friend, shoot myself and get the agony over, or shoot the nit. I guess I'm still in mourning.
Gerry said:hmm...just this week I sat on the rail for 1dime....which turned into 2dime 1pocket action.....and this weekend I'm going to watch nickle a rack 8ball!!!
"you all" gotta move up north!....where's TAR?
roosterman said:One foul ball in hand is what stopped match up action.Nobody knows what kind of weight to give.With two foul it was lot easier to gage a guys game.Dont you think
av84fun said:But I don't think leagues have done anything to inhibit gambling. Most league players have no business gambling in the first place...with ANY spot.
Just getting robbed consistently...not league play...is what has shrunk the pool of marks.
Neil said:Nah, my 'road days' were over about 25 years ago. But it seems that nowadays you see a ton of guys with cues that cost $500-$1,000 that are six or sevens in league play that won't bet more than a race to five for $10, and want weight for that.
But talk about locks, the league players are the masters at that . I've had sixes in the APA refuse to play me unless they get the 6 out and the snaps. That's tough for Kirkwood to give, let alone someone of my caliber. For me to give that up would be ludicrous.
Just wanted to add that I have heard many, many league players say they won't practice because they would get better and then their handicapp would go up. ??????????? Not enough people playing pool take pride in their game anymore. Just in how low their handicapp is.
1on1pooltournys said:I think all of the particpators in this thread need to meet at a huge poolroom and match up!!
ironman said:everyone wants to play sets, cheap sets and take a ppk at it only to pull after one cheap set.
If you don't play for money how are you going to play the best in the world? In mine and many others opinions any one of a 100 guys can win any event they enter. What tells the tale is who will get in the box and play some even. The best players and pool culture in the world is in the Philippines. Gambling is an integral part of that culture.softshot said:enough league bashing.... just because YOUR league sucks does not mean all leagues suck...
It has nothing to do with gambling....Pool does not equal gambling to the vast majority of the world....that theory belongs only to a small subset of pool players...
playing with "something on the line" could be money... could be pride...could be league standing... could be lots of things... it is still playing under pressure.. and that is the universally accepted mark of a good pool player.
there are a billion ways to bet and lose your money..... you wanna gamble.. go for it...
my goal is to be the best pool player in the world... I have a bit of work left to do in that area .... but that is my goal..
reaching that goal has nothing to do with money..if I become the best in the world...thats it's own reward even if it cost me money... I don't care.. pool is my love .. not my living....if I make money at it... thats just a bonus...
I'm not playing to get rich...
I'm not playing to get famous...
I don't want to be on a Mosconi cup team....
I want YOU to be terrified to play me because you know I am the best in the world.....
one day I WILL get there.... regardless of how much I win or how much it costs....
frankwhite said:Hey Gerry, who is playin? That's a sporty bet, a nick a rack 8ball......
traa89 said:You now see why I just sold all of my pool equipment. No more gambling anymore. people are nitti in my opinion. Only reason Im on here is to check to see if my last cue sold.
softshot said:enough league bashing.... just because YOUR league sucks does not mean all leagues suck...
It has nothing to do with gambling....Pool does not equal gambling to the vast majority of the world....that theory belongs only to a small subset of pool players...
playing with "something on the line" could be money... could be pride...could be league standing... could be lots of things... it is still playing under pressure.. and that is the universally accepted mark of a good pool player.
there are a billion ways to bet and lose your money..... you wanna gamble.. go for it...
my goal is to be the best pool player in the world... I have a bit of work left to do in that area .... but that is my goal..
reaching that goal has nothing to do with money..if I become the best in the world...thats it's own reward even if it cost me money... I don't care.. pool is my love .. not my living....if I make money at it... thats just a bonus...
I'm not playing to get rich...
I'm not playing to get famous...
I don't want to be on a Mosconi cup team....
I want YOU to be terrified to play me because you know I am the best in the world.....
one day I WILL get there.... regardless of how much I win or how much it costs....
Blackjack said:While I understand that gambling has its place in our game, let me also point something out from my point of view on this subject.
I gambled for most of my young adult life. I won, I lost, gambling was just what I did. I did it with cards, pool, dice, horses, dogs, sports, you name it - I was laying bets on it.
As my life went on, the gambling became a real problem. It wasn't because I wasn't lucky, or that I was losing pool games - it was because it became an addiction. An addiction to action - it wasn't about the money - it was about the rush I got sweating the bets.
At first I was smart about it. Then I wasn't controlling it - it was controlling me.
It started to negatively effect every single aspect of my life, and I paid a dear price for that.
It destroyed my family.
It strained every relationship that I had in my life.
It negatively effected my professional reputation.
In the end I was left with nothing but heartache, strained relationships, and yes... nearly insurmountable debt.
I did something about it. I had to stop. Much like alcoholism, drugs, and cigarettes, it was an addiction. I've heard people come on here and try to glamorize gambling. It's not glamorous. If it is under control and it is not controlling every aspect of your life - I see no problem with it. Trouble is, I see very few "social" gamblers - and I don't hear many success stories out there. Many of my best friends from back in the day are dead. D-E-A-D. Those that are still alive fall into two major categories:
a) they are struggling financially
b) they've turned their life around too
One day I woke up and looked around the room. I saw guys twice my age doing exactly what I was doing and they had absolutely nothing to show for it. That was the moment that I woke up and realized that if I kept it up, someday I would be one of those guys.
I'm not here to preach - I'm just here to say that today I am more responsible with what I do with my money, my energy, and with my time. I don't rate my game on how much money I can play for. Anybody that tries to sell you that line is trying to reel you in.
I am not against action. I am not against gambling in pool - in fact I am all for using it as a tool to reel people into the beauty and excitement of our game. What I am against is people trying to say that it is the only true test to attain excellence. It's not. Ask Ralf Souquet.
I am also against people that say that if you aren't participating in it, you have no nuts. I am a decorated combat war veteran. I've fought and beat cancer - twice - I fought crime and violence every night for over 5 years as a police officer - and I was bodyslammed by Bruiser Brody on the cement floor of the Sportatorium in Dallas. Nuts I have. To me those things speak of my true character and who you are likely to deal with if you meet me in a dark alley.
It took me a long time to recover from the destruction of my gambling days. Recovering from all of that was much more difficult than any game I ever played for money. Today if I use the money that I do have to help other people - I don't gamble with it - or piss it away by staking somebody else. I try to make someone's day instead of breaking them down financially.
I've accomplished enough in my life to where it won't bother me if you want to label me a nit, or whatever - say whatever you need to feel better about yourself - I know what I have to do every day to survive - and gambling isn't one of them. If it is for you and you can control it - fine - just don't paint a broad brush to those of us that make wiser investments.