Bitter.....doesn't describe it.
Owning a business in an industry that can't find is ass from a hole in the ground, has no leadership, has a professional group that is me me me, has a trade organization that claims it's the governing body, having amateur players support this, and then a base of clueless customers who learned the game in bars......................
Anger is a better word.
There is no question that an audience is needed to support the TV ratings. But, that audience, that you claim to be at 230,000 should be tens of millions by now. They've been in business since 1979. All they do is continually replace the players they've run off.
I live and operate a business in their back yard. The APA was at one time big here. It is now almost nonexistent. Small start up leagues have simply dominated it. The money the APA offers doesn't matter when the system is so far flawed that it is dishonest. And it will fail around the country as soon as other small leagues develop in those areas or when a national pool room league is formed.
The best system is one that is in house where the league operator can actually watch players play. Still not perfect, but an operator who plays a little pool can watch a player at the table and by his stance, stroke, shot selection, patterns, safety play etc etc etc can make a judgement real quick on a player. He can set a ball park from which that player can settle into his category.
To think 230,000 players carry a handicap beside their name, and few if any of them have been watched by someone who knows pool, and their handicap is determined by their match scores, and many do not try to win those matches, and you support the system proves, beyond a shadow of a doubt that there are many suckers on this earth.
But...............what comes in the front door continually leaks out the back door because the system in place can not and will not work.
Owning a business in an industry that can't find is ass from a hole in the ground, has no leadership, has a professional group that is me me me, has a trade organization that claims it's the governing body, having amateur players support this, and then a base of clueless customers who learned the game in bars......................
Anger is a better word.
There is no question that an audience is needed to support the TV ratings. But, that audience, that you claim to be at 230,000 should be tens of millions by now. They've been in business since 1979. All they do is continually replace the players they've run off.
I live and operate a business in their back yard. The APA was at one time big here. It is now almost nonexistent. Small start up leagues have simply dominated it. The money the APA offers doesn't matter when the system is so far flawed that it is dishonest. And it will fail around the country as soon as other small leagues develop in those areas or when a national pool room league is formed.
The best system is one that is in house where the league operator can actually watch players play. Still not perfect, but an operator who plays a little pool can watch a player at the table and by his stance, stroke, shot selection, patterns, safety play etc etc etc can make a judgement real quick on a player. He can set a ball park from which that player can settle into his category.
To think 230,000 players carry a handicap beside their name, and few if any of them have been watched by someone who knows pool, and their handicap is determined by their match scores, and many do not try to win those matches, and you support the system proves, beyond a shadow of a doubt that there are many suckers on this earth.
But...............what comes in the front door continually leaks out the back door because the system in place can not and will not work.