IPT To Be Sold???

9 Ball Girl

aka Wendy
Silver Member
From the Billiards Digest website:

Big Changes at IPT: Tour to Be Sold, London Event Cancelled

The future of the fledgling, multimillion-dollar International Pool Tour was cast in doubt on Saturday by news that tour founder Kevin Trudeau had entered into an agreement to sell the tour, and that the IPT Players 8-Ball Championship, scheduled for Oct. 22-29, had been cancelled.

Both announcements came during the players’ meeting Saturday for the IPT’s World 8-Ball Open Championship, set for Sept. 3-10 at the Grand Sierra Resort and Casino in Reno, Nev.

According to an IPT release, the IPT has agreed to a purchase by Ho Interactive, a new company started by casino owner billionaire Stanley Ho, who also owns online gambling site www.hocasino.com. IPT founder Trudeau told the crowd of 200 players that Ho Interactive will be taken public on the London exchange at some point in the near future.

The 84-year-old Ho is worth $3.6 billion, according to Forbes magazine’s 2005 list of the richest people in the world. The Hong Kong-based Ho controls virtually all casinos and gaming in Macau, a small Chinese territory off China’s southern coast.

Little was immediately known about the sale, or how it will affect the IPT’s plans for a 2007 season. BD will release new information as it becomes available.

The players also were informed that the London-based Players Championship was cancelled, due to problems in negotiations with The Excel, the intended host facility.

IPT Director Deno Andrews had told BD in the days leading up to the World 8-Ball Open event that cancellation of the event was a possibility, due to several reasons. They included the fear among some players of a terrorist attack, sparked by recent terrorist arrests in the U.K.; the trouble several international players were encountering obtaining visas for the U.K.; and conflicts in the programming schedule of EuroSport, the broadcast network that had planned to air some of the IPT matches live.

“At every juncture, we’ve had a problem with the London tournament,” Andrews told BD on Aug. 25.

Three more events are set on the IPT's 2006 schedule: the Masters 8-Ball Championship, Nov. 26-Dec. 3 in Chicago; the King of the Hill Invitational 8-Ball Shootout, Dec. 12-17 in Las Vegas; and a simultaneous 2007 qualifying event, also set for Dec. 12-17.

At the players’ meeting, IPT members were promised a minimum of $13,000 for the 2006 season for every player who played in all the 2006 tournaments. Those whose total winnings were short of the figure would be written a check for the difference.
 
Kevin is one smart dude and he made 150 million dollars out of that deal.anything he touches it becomes gold.I wonder what his Zodiac sign is!!!
 
Eydie Romano said:
Yeah, from what I have heard, it's a done deal...
My hat is off to Kevin; someone finally found a way to make some money out of pool. Seriously, I now think the guy is brilliant.
 
JDB said:
My hat is off to Kevin; someone finally found a way to make some money out of pool. Seriously, I now think the guy is brilliant.

we gave him what "we" wanted. he only took advantage of it. his earnings are a credit to "our" desire for grandeur. we're on the outside looking in. it doesn't have to take a con/millionaire to make or break this industry. it just takes work from those within it! this site can be a good start. i'm sure if there was a collective discussion among az members, within, and allot of associates of az members (players and venders alike) outside these forums there could be another alternative that could take this industry to another level. it just takes initiative. the problem is that's where Kevin is "ahead" of the "game".
 
vagabond said:
Kevin is one smart dude and he made 150 million dollars out of that deal.anything he touches it becomes gold.I wonder what his Zodiac sign is!!!

Where do you see "150 million" in that article? Do you have other sources? (Edit: I see now it was mentioned in that thread in the IPT forum - and there's still the question whether KT is going to (not 'has' as they're in an agreement to be acquired, not a done deal yet) get $150mil or whether Ho will invest $150mil into the IPT itself.)

I sincerly doubt that any sale price would be publicized... that's not the sort of thing businesspeople do.

And frankly, anything over maybe 5 mil is too much for the IPT. It's barely established, it has no real assets. It's something that any group of folks with enough cash behind them could start up and pull off.
 
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Wow this came as a shock, not. That mister big hustler him self sold the IPT...
 
the sales of the ipt makes it a viable commodity of worth. imo, there shouldn't be any complaints. when you put a value on something, it is given relevence. if anyone(like me) was ever wondering if pool had a product to present to interested parties(read that sponsors), this now takes it one step closer....pool now has market value where it didn't before.

plus,,,,,the ipt schedueling was spotty anyway, and was one reason i believe, that o'sullivan changed his mind about joining in the beginning.

if ho plunked down millions, he's going to try to make the ipt better. i don't think he wants to p!ss cash away.
 
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What an absolute load of rubbish. What exactly did KT sell? What are the assets of the IPT? does he have even one big star under exclusive contract? Why would any reasonable businessman purchase something that has no real value, that hasn't done anything yet?

KT may be able to hoodwink ordinary morons who are desperate for a "natural cure" out of $49.95, but come on folks...any businessman with an accountant in the back room wouldn't even take a peek at the IPT. It's completely brand new and is just getting off the ground.

The IPT has some of the best press release writers in the world. They claim that the OLN ratings were a "ratings blockbuster." In fact the ratings were a .5, which is below acceptable. And the young demographic they were looking for wasn't there. the demographic was over 50. Everyone keeps talking about how eurosport paid the IPT. the fact is that the IPT gave eurosport the broadcast for free.

And while pool is certainly very popular in Asia, rarely does it make serious money. Not the kind of money to warrant putting up $150 million for something that barely exists.

This latest chapter, entitled "Ho to the Rescue," sounds like a good way for KT to pass the buck when he decides he's had enough of throwing money away. Just blame it on some Ho in Hong Kong.

By the way, I'm selling the Pacific Ocean for $150 million. Anyone interested?
 
bruin70 said:
the sales of the ipt makes it a viable commodity of worth. imo, there shouldn't be any complaints. when you put a value on something, it it given relevence. if anyone(like me) was ever wondering if pool had a product to present to interested parties(read that sponsors), this now takes it one step closer....pool now has market value where it didn't before.

plus,,,,,the ipt schedueling was spotty anyway, and was one reason i believe, that o'sullivan changed his mind about joining in the beginning.

if ho plunked down millions, he's going to try to make it better.

You think the entire IPT was brought down by Ronnie O'Sullivan not competing?

Really?
 
It's not that unusual for entreprenurial folks to start businesses for the sole purpose of selling them to a second entity that is better suited to maintain or perhaps grow the business further. If the tour indeed was sold at a substantial profit, then that would indicate an anticipated higher future value.

Might not be bad. We just don't have all the facts.
 
StiffStick said:
What an absolute load of rubbish. What exactly did KT sell? What are the assets of the IPT? does he have even one big star under exclusive contract? Why would any reasonable businessman purchase something that has no real value, that hasn't done anything yet?

KT may be able to hoodwink ordinary morons who are desperate for a "natural cure" out of $49.95, but come on folks...any businessman with an accountant in the back room wouldn't even take a peek at the IPT. It's completely brand new and is just getting off the ground.

And while pool is certainly very popular in Asia, rarely does it make serious money. Not the kind of money to warrant putting up $150 million for something that barely exists.

Yep, I think something like "Ho agrees to invest $150m into the IPT and KT retains x%" is probably closer to the truth. The IPT has next to no value at present, certainly not 150m and a guy like Ho will certainly know that. But hey we're all taking about the takeover and not the cancelled event arent we ;)
 
StiffStick said:
What an absolute load of rubbish. What exactly did KT sell? interested?

i can tell you that there are cues out there that are not what they are purported to be, but have been given validity because someone paid the price, and then again. and with each transaction, perception becomes reality.

will it last,,,,no, because it will all catch up. but in the meantime, is pool any worse off than before??? and in the meantime how does anyone know what ho will do for the ipt. i'm not trying to equate the personnal value of a cue with the ipt, but this is about perception.

if pool was sh!t on before, and the ipt was sh!t on for what it did or did not do for pool, then what's the rush to to sh!t on this transaction.kt made a buck,,,so what.
 
My first thought was Mr Ho might be a pool freak, and with 3.5 BIL in your pocket, he might be buying the IPT for something to do. He already owns casinos, and if he brings the IPT to his casinos, who knows what its worth in marketing? For him to throw a few million at the IPT is like me playing $100 sets.....it's just not a big deal either way:D

Gerry
 
ScottW said:
It's barely established, it has no real assets.

Players are the ASSETS.Players are like a PRODUCT and now it appears that those buisinessman know how to market that product.:cool:
 
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