Bullshit. You play in crappy bars with other bangers who don't have a clue about the game of pool. The drinking scene is stable in your area and there just happens to be some pool tables around.
You calling the environment you are in a part of the "pool community" is like me using the calculator on my iPhone and saying I am a part of the advanced mathematics community.
You are clueless, as usual.
Even if I forgot that some of these "bangers" in my area played on national or European-level tournaments, my humble crew and I are still doing more for pool than the average kid who spends all his time on the web and probably never held a cue. I also stated in the OP that for the purpose of this thread we count anyone who plays regularly as a pool player, bangers included.
Yes, but in the small Polish farming community Push&pool is from, the bar has a pool table, where he and his friends make up stupid rules on the fly while taking a running start for power shots, and they get like 15 people on weekend nights, so the line is like really long, and he held the table for 30 minutes without losing due to advance and unconventional strategies.
And by the way, the above quoted post reinforces my point about the retirement community and the culture today for the younger crowd.
I hope this is just another failed attempt at being funny, cause now I start to wonder if you ever heard of the term "geography". Polish farming community wouldn't be the best description of the place, as we have at least half a dozen fairly popular bars and pool rooms, with a large number of players being rather young. Let's settle the argument with this: older crowd is more likely to play pool on a regular basis, but if the young ones have places to play which they like in general (bars, music, relative proximity of city center and night clubs, other games like darts, reasonable prices...), they'll easily outnumber more mature players.
What MahnaMahna is pointing out is simple demographics. In my case a bunch of geezers who grew up playing in bars in college towns, student unions, or on military bases. We now have the security of our own homes with nice tables in the basement. We are surrounded by like minded folks. And just like 40 or 50 years ago it is a social gathering.
As to that 18-35 year old grouping, he's right. I have a nephew who grew up never owning a baseball glove, football or hockey stick. The only way he relates to others of his age group is with smart phone or computer games. All geek, all the time. That does not bode well for pool which is a social game or sport.
I don't know what the stats might be for the numbers of players per 100,000 now vs. the 1930's. I do know it's moved from the public hall to the private basement. Even with all the basement tables in my neighborhood there are still three pool halls within five miles of me. (Winchester, VA.) Considering the population density, that is amazing.
From my experience a large majority of kids and younger people won't spend all their time indoors if they have places to go out which are close by, rather cheap and suit their needs. Most bars are an excellent example of that. Now, if you manage to get pool tables in schools with infinite free play time...
So, are there LESS or MORE cue makers today, than there was 85 years ago? For a slowing, or dying sport....there's MORE cue makers today building and selling more cues than ever in the history of this sport...so, I think people need to look at other gages to read this industry besides pool rooms that refuse to get caught up with the times and therefor fall under the bridge of doom because of it.
Glen
If the statistics you're speaking of are correct, that's great news! I agree that most people here are too close-minded and old-fashioned that they don't want to settle with the numbers. They want their pre-WWII pool halls back, even if that's impossible at this moment. If you ask me, every pool fan should be more than happy if the following happened:
- the complete pool scene moves to bars
- the number of bars containing at least one pool table grows rapidly
- total number of sold tables, cues and other equipment increases (this doesn't include private tables)
- much more young people are attracted to pool (at least as bangers)
- massive amateur leagues (like APA, GPPA etc.) gain countless new members and thrive
- pool becomes firmly stable and begins to rise globally once again
I'd trade every pool hall out there this very second for the events above coming true.