depends on the league and/or team
I think the league experience is good or bad depending on the type of league and your team. The league I play in has a $60 flat fee for a 14-week season, and you can play up to four games per week for the league match. This fee sounds like a bargain compared to most experiences I've read on here. The fee includes all playoff matches at the end of the season, too.
Our league also sponsors 8-ball and 9-ball tournaments that alternate every other season. For $20, you get eight chances (eight qualifying tournaments) to play in the final for cash payouts. You can also collect runner-up points for second-place finishes; if a qualifier doesn't show up at the final, the runner-up with the most points gets to play. I think this is pretty encouraging system, and by playing in the qualifier tournaments, I get to play better players than I would during weekly matches.
But the experience is also frustrating based on my team members. When my team started six seasons ago, everyone was excited; it didn't matter that we were all pretty new and got our butts handed to us nearly every week, we had a lot of fun. We still have fun together, but I'm the only one who has any real desire put in the time to get better, and I'm getting tired. I've improved from the bottom 30% (of an average of 200 league members) to the top 15%; my teammates are still in the bottom 20%. Forget about team practice; I can't even get individual members to come out on non-league nights to play a few games, and if they do show, they're more interested in getting trashed. I've turned down offers of joining better teams out of a sense of loyalty to my friends, but I believe I'll be looking for a new team next season, one that is more focused on playing well instead of just getting loaded.
So our league is whatever you make of it - teams that play extremely well, are focused, and have a lot of fun; crappy teams that have a lot of fun but pool is secondary; and us frustrated ones in the middle, torn between having fun with friends vs. wanting to succeed and improve and have fun with like-minded friends.
I think the league experience is good or bad depending on the type of league and your team. The league I play in has a $60 flat fee for a 14-week season, and you can play up to four games per week for the league match. This fee sounds like a bargain compared to most experiences I've read on here. The fee includes all playoff matches at the end of the season, too.
Our league also sponsors 8-ball and 9-ball tournaments that alternate every other season. For $20, you get eight chances (eight qualifying tournaments) to play in the final for cash payouts. You can also collect runner-up points for second-place finishes; if a qualifier doesn't show up at the final, the runner-up with the most points gets to play. I think this is pretty encouraging system, and by playing in the qualifier tournaments, I get to play better players than I would during weekly matches.
But the experience is also frustrating based on my team members. When my team started six seasons ago, everyone was excited; it didn't matter that we were all pretty new and got our butts handed to us nearly every week, we had a lot of fun. We still have fun together, but I'm the only one who has any real desire put in the time to get better, and I'm getting tired. I've improved from the bottom 30% (of an average of 200 league members) to the top 15%; my teammates are still in the bottom 20%. Forget about team practice; I can't even get individual members to come out on non-league nights to play a few games, and if they do show, they're more interested in getting trashed. I've turned down offers of joining better teams out of a sense of loyalty to my friends, but I believe I'll be looking for a new team next season, one that is more focused on playing well instead of just getting loaded.
So our league is whatever you make of it - teams that play extremely well, are focused, and have a lot of fun; crappy teams that have a lot of fun but pool is secondary; and us frustrated ones in the middle, torn between having fun with friends vs. wanting to succeed and improve and have fun with like-minded friends.
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