3andstop said:That's interesting, but not really a surprise here. IMO its the same old story. Its a much simpler game to understand and play, and subsequently become interested in, and at least play well enough at, that you don't have to feel awkward trying it in public.
You can hang a dart board just about anywhere, so the game is accessible to more people. It's cheaper to buy your equipment, its a far more sociable game than pool, and on and on. - SNIP.
I'm not sure the "easy and cheap to do" can apply to why pool is not popular. Take Skiing.. huge Olympic sport, very popular, yet the equipment for it will cost a lot. You can easily spend $80 a day on food and a lift ticket alone, before spending $300 on skiis, $200 on boots and a couple hundred on clothing. And that is for lower to mid level stuff.
It's just an odd demographic, pool = lowlifes, cheating, gambling, fights to most of the country, including those people that control the money. In the early days it was elegant and refined, much like Golf is these days. Not sure when the turn toward seedy took place, but right now, that's where we are sitting at.