How honest is pool today?

Grizzle

Registered
Hey guys,

Just recently I read Danny DiLiberto's book Road Player and tore through it in one night. It's a great read and I highly recommend it if you can find a copy. However, I was pretty surprised reading about how rampant dumping and one-way bites were. It was a bit disheartening to read about great guys like Ronnie Allen dumping, and especially to hear about how fed up a big-time gambler like Amarillo Slim was with how crooked money games became. I knew dumping went on, but still it was sad to read about this lack of honesty.

My real question though is this - in general, how honest are money games today? Is dumping still relatively common, and you really have to know the angles to avoid it when you're backing a player? Or is it largely a thing of the past? Also, what is the bite system like today? Is that another bygone relic? I don't get to spend enough time at my local pool hall, and I've never seen any big names play, so I'm just looking for some opinions here. I know there are some money players and stakehorses that post regularly here, so let's hear what you have to say.
 
Try to know what you are getting yourself into, and NEVER bet more than you can afford to lose. I think that is the only way to go.
 
One way to avoid dumping if backing a player? Make him put up half the bet...and bet big. Wouldn't completely eleminate the dump, but it sure would reduce it.
 
even simplier solution...don't put up money on someone else's talent (I don't care how well you think you know them). Alot of people are so driven by money they don't care who they step on to get it, so just stay away.
 
trustyrusty said:
even simplier solution...don't put up money on someone else's talent (I don't care how well you think you know them). Alot of people are so driven by money they don't care who they step on to get it, so just stay away.

Its sad that ppl are like that... my dad backs me and I never dump wit him! :cool:
 
honesty?

I remember once upon a time, I lamented to a friend about the seeming scarcity of honesty in dealings with people....then, subsequently, when I got a Coleman lantern for a birthday gift, he asked, "Are you going to use it to find an honest man in the woods?"

Ah, when it comes to money, or other material things, for that matter, I remember the old expressions: "Every man has a bit of larceny in his heart."
"Everyone has his dark side". "A fool and his money are soon parted."
"Let the buyer beware."

Enough said.
 
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