Well then I can't imagine what the holdup is with one for pool. As I look at some of those names though, I find it hard to believe they are charging dues. Maybe they do. :shrug:
Ah yes, well, now lets discuss the trust that I need to place in the governing body. Surely you're joking. You bring this up as if there's no precedent to look back upon.
Nationwide marketing costs big bucks. Unfortunately, your idea needs to be implemented by someone with those big bucks to spend, but is also willing to get virtually nothing in return. Let's face it, what does this organizing body really get from this if they actually use the funds for the greater good? Remember, that organizing body is nothing more than the people who operate it. In this case, probably quite few.
So you need someone with tons of cash for marketing, willing to volunteer their time.
Imo, the most successful such venture that's organized and nationwide would be the Valley leagues. Unfortunately, those leagues are almost all in bars and don't cater to the younger player who needs exposed to the game. Great idea, wrong demographic. And, they too have difficulty in getting players even with the handicap system they use. If you ask me, the difficulty with leagues is it becomes recreation on a schedule. Now that recreation feels a little like a job. And any honest person here will admit to the fact that it can sometimes make scheduling the rest of your life a pita.
I'd say a better idea is to wait until the big events that already exist are overflowing and turning away players. Let the promoters of those events set the tone for smaller ones. A well organized event is a great barometer for how the industry is really going. The way for that to happen is to get the players to do the legwork and get others involved in playing. Not an easy thing to do. But, that's the group that needs to step up and help bring more shooters to the game. I know I've brought at least half a dozen players to the game. Most don't play any more, but if each of them did the same, you get the idea. And, why don't people do that? Well, because there's no benefit to them for doing it. Just like there's no benefit for a room owner to pay your tax. You need a special type of person willing to do something for the game, for nothing.
I've met pros and seriously talented players who are in the american sense of success or at least respectability which are basically losers. Broke as a teenager, living on couches, no car, no girlfriend/wife/kids and ragged clothes and dirty shoes. being a pool player doesn't bring with it a sense of pride in todays culture. and everything is magnified on the web. I love this game, its people and the challenge it brings. I never said i was ashamed, read between the lines.As soon as I read your ashamed to be a pool player I stopped reading ... go play golf golf if your so ashamed.
don't have too, WPA, BCA, etc...Feel free to start this up yourself.
I don't see events getting bigger, only smaller. all im saying is, if theres money to help promote the game, which has to start with the top talent when it comes to sports, it will be a benefit for the businesses of its industry. sameway when the color of money came out in theaters and there was a boom, people need to know that its actually happening, that poolhalls exist. snooker players are respected in england, they make a couple millions by the end of their careers, why not here.Ah yes, well, now lets discuss the trust that I need to place in the governing body. Surely you're joking. You bring this up as if there's no precedent to look back upon.
Nationwide marketing costs big bucks. Unfortunately, your idea needs to be implemented by someone with those big bucks to spend, but is also willing to get virtually nothing in return. Let's face it, what does this organizing body really get from this if they actually use the funds for the greater good? Remember, that organizing body is nothing more than the people who operate it. In this case, probably quite few.
So you need someone with tons of cash for marketing, willing to volunteer their time.
Imo, the most successful such venture that's organized and nationwide would be the Valley leagues. Unfortunately, those leagues are almost all in bars and don't cater to the younger player who needs exposed to the game. Great idea, wrong demographic. And, they too have difficulty in getting players even with the handicap system they use. If you ask me, the difficulty with leagues is it becomes recreation on a schedule. Now that recreation feels a little like a job. And any honest person here will admit to the fact that it can sometimes make scheduling the rest of your life a pita.
I'd say a better idea is to wait until the big events that already exist are overflowing and turning away players. Let the promoters of those events set the tone for smaller ones. A well organized event is a great barometer for how the industry is really going. The way for that to happen is to get the players to do the legwork and get others involved in playing. Not an easy thing to do. But, that's the group that needs to step up and help bring more shooters to the game. I know I've brought at least half a dozen players to the game. Most don't play any more, but if each of them did the same, you get the idea. And, why don't people do that? Well, because there's no benefit to them for doing it. Just like there's no benefit for a room owner to pay your tax. You need a special type of person willing to do something for the game, for nothing.
I've met pros and seriously talented players who are in the american sense of success or at least respectability which are basically losers. Broke as a teenager, living on couches, no car, no girlfriend/wife/kids and ragged clothes and dirty shoes. being a pool player doesn't bring with it a sense of pride in todays culture. and everything is magnified on the web. I love this game, its people and the challenge it brings. I never said i was ashamed, read between the lines.
don't have too, WPA, BCA, etc...
I don't see events getting bigger, only smaller. all im saying is, if theres money to help promote the game, which has to start with the top talent when it comes to sports, it will be a benefit for the businesses of its industry. sameway when the color of money came out in theaters and there was a boom, people need to know that its actually happening, that poolhalls exist. snooker players are respected in england, they make a couple millions by the end of their careers, why not here.
That subject gets discussed often in interviews with Johnny Archer and the like. Unfortunately, pool has earned that stigma. I cannot think of any other game where playing it almost requires that you play players better than yourself for money or you can't join in. Does every pick-up basketball game in the park ride on wagers? Every baseball game or softball game? What other games are there where you require cash to get involved, every time? So, whatever reputation the game has, I'm pretty sure it earned. Even when I play with my friends, it's always for 'something'. Might not be much, but it ain't for free unless I know I'm going to beat them, since I really don't care about it. But if I'm playing a stronger player, you can bet it ain't for nuthin.I hate when I mention to people that I'm a semi-pro pool player that they then start referring to me as the hustler or the pool shark.
I correct them and make sure they know what those terms mean but that just showcases the cultural stigma that has stuck to billiards at the highest level in the minds of the public.
Jaden
Well then I can't imagine what the holdup is with one for pool. As I look at some of those names though, I find it hard to believe they are charging dues. Maybe they do. :shrug:
Feel free to start this up yourself.
As a business owner you have to look at the big picture.
So no it isn't a shake down tax, it's a business advertisement expense, fully able to be written off as such.
Jaden
Jaden, I normally agree with a lot of your posts, so I truly am not arguing with you just for something to do... Having said that:
You call this a "business expense". I also assume this would be voluntary. So a voluntary business expense would then be deemed an "investment", in my eyes...
As an "investment", sell me on it. You have the floor, and have my attention.
Tell me what my expected ROI (Return On Investment) is?
Tell me what my expected time frame for said ROI is?
Given what I saw in one thread where a person mentioned that rent for a building to put a room in might be as high as 20k/month, I think the business to get into is renting buildings to pool rooms. Do you know how much building you can buy for 20k/month? That's a nice big building mister. Even for 3k/month, you could put a lot of pool tables into a building that size.
Another problem I see is that table time in rooms is sometimes higher by the hour than the wages of the people playing on them. How does anyone think that is going to be fun? If the room I go to didn't offer a special for daily rates (play as long as you like at one price) I'd never go. And my rate for a day is the same as the rate for an hour for a table. Though for me it is for one person and for a table it's for any number of people.
Putting quarters in a table isn't any cheaper... That is some serious hourly rate when you start stringing racks with someone.
Did the same in the 90s, my local haunt had free pool on Tuesdays, but I always joked, "every night is free pool night for me in here". Truth is, when you're winning that much, you're doing nothing for your game. Probably more of a disservice.That's why when I started playing back in the '80s I love the BB...I'd go to the busiest bars with several tables where all tables ended up being challenge tables...place is packed, wall to wall, loud rock/roll or country music blaring, put in my .50 cents, play for a beer on each game and play/drink all night for just half a buck. Play for $5-10 a rack and you could rack up a pretty nice score. Man I miss those days.... :thumbup:
Believe me, if I decided to put something like this together, I could sell it.
I'm not trying to sell anything, I just think that it could be in a businesses best interests to get involved in something like this if it is put together the right way and would truly help to bolster an overall interest in billiards.
More interest in billiards means more people wanting to play, and people already playing wanting to play more often and that means more people in pool halls patronizing those businesses.
If I were to be putting something like this together, I would have a website that offered free instruction and would promote the member businesses on the website during and as a part of any events we had, we would hold qualifiers in the member pool halls establishments
We would mention member businesses during events, list them and our links to them in flyers and promotions.
It would definitely be both esoterically and directly beneficial to the member businesses if I were to put something like this together.
Jaden
p.s. If done right, something like this could also become the definitive body for professional pool in the US.
I hate when I mention to people that I'm a semi-pro pool player that they then start referring to me as the hustler or the pool shark.
I correct them and make sure they know what those terms mean but that just showcases the cultural stigma that has stuck to billiards at the highest level in the minds of the public.
Jaden
I think you should be in government. You've got all kinds of great ideas that other people should pay for. Tax the room owners, tax the leagues, tax anything related to pool.
But don't worry, the money will be spent by a "trustworthy governing body." Yeah, right.![]()
Your idea is not new. Mr. Baker of Tampa's famous Baker billiards tried to do the same thing back in the late 60's. Remember that back then there were pool rooms in like every city and 10 of thousands of tables in pool rooms across the US.
I his mind the people who really benefitted from pool was the room owners themselves and they should be the ones to promote it. He had the same idea for each room to pay based on so much per table, a national room owners association.
There really was no need for a large main sponsor since as a group they were far bigger then any sponsor. He wanted to run Big national tournaments with local qualifiers that room owners could directly benefit from. He had a plan for league play much like bowling where they were in house leagues and the rooms could benefit from them directly and instantly.
It was all down on paper and he traveled to many rooms trying to promote his idea as well as mail outs and calling. It went nowhere. In fact room owners are so short sited I have put on tournaments and had room owners not even want to put up a poster with the excuse,
"Why should I advertise someone else's room I want them here playing, not somewhere else watching a tournament". Do they actually think their customers have never been to another room? They would come back after the tournament hyped up wanting to play even more.
Room owners are by far as a group the most powerful entity in the industry and they don't seem to even know it. I have a feeling organizing them would be like herding cats.
^^^^
Mac,
Fair enough, but really what the op was referring to was something that would have effect on the end user (customer). You are suggesting (quite correctly) that there needs to be some trade organization, but how to start it and what it would do is big question. Pool is in a catch 22 where it needs marketing to gain players, and needs players to do and fund the marketing. If some of the companies making products were swimming in cash, I'm sure they'd have no trouble with forking over marketing funds. But there doesn't appear to be surplus of such companies making pool gear. I certainly don't have the answers.