My 40 Gripes that damage pool

Wags

2 pocket-one pocket table
Silver Member
This article is meant to cause controversy and I hope there is a lot of it. These opinions and conjectures are from 45 years of playing the game and watching it go downhill due to shortsighted visions by people that can make a difference. I am old enough now to not care about whose toes I step on or if they are idiots in my estimation. I do care about this game and if I can change a few minds and outlooks then I’ve accomplished something.

My observations:
1. Of the approximately 50 million pool players in the United States, only .0001% (50 players) have a chance of winning a Pro tournament. Most tournaments are won by only 10 of those 50.

2. Compared to other major sports, overall, pool is a lower purse sport that is dependent upon entry fees to make the purse.

3. Better players want “perfect” conditions in which to play. “Perfect” conditions apparently are very tight pockets, new cloth, fast rails, absolutely true roll, etc.

4. Better players want to take the “luck” factor away. Please name a sport where luck is NOT a factor.

5. The professional game for spectators is boring. There is no “WOW” factor, except for SVB never missing a jump shot, the amazing Efren Reyes, Alex Pagulayan having fun and the antics of Earl Strickland.

6. The Break is too big? It is, only in the pro and top amateur game.

7. Lesser players (as opposed to pros) are needed in tournaments to increase the purse size.

8. The “ball in hand” rule is too huge of penalty.

9. The game is not better or worse depending upon the equipment used. It is just played with different strategies.

10. Pool Rooms that don’t have a junior league system are dumb. Where are your next players coming from?

11. The BEF needs to hire a full-time presenter and team up with table/cue/accessory manufacturers to persuade school systems into the lifetime sport aspect of pool.

12. The majority of players just want to make the ball.

13. There are no current hard statistics to be found on playing ability (with the exception of the IPT).

14. The IPT tournaments caused more excitement in pool and brought more players back to pool since “The Color of Money”.

15. Media coverage for pool sucks.

16. There have been no technological advances for broadcast media specifically for pool in decades. (If there ever has been any.)

17. There is no real men’s tour because they can’t get along and do what is good for the game.

18. The WPBA is falling apart because they can’t get along and do what is good for the game.

19. What is good for the game will be good for the professional players.

20. They don’t make the cups smaller in golf for the pros.

21. Why is most of the industry table specifications based around those 50 players?

22. There are shot selections that can’t be considered with the 4.5 inch pockets that are reasonable with larger openings.

23. I see players who can’t make straight in punt shots espouse the virtues of tight pocket tables. (Monkey see, monkey do.)

24. No matter the table set up, (pockets, cloth, etc.) the better player is always the better player even if they lose 1 in 20 because the table isn’t to their satisfaction.

25. Why do manufacturers allow their products to be sold on the internet undercutting the room sales which the room needs to keep in business? Without the room, there is no business.

26. By my count using the Yellow pages, in 2003 there were approximately 5000+ rooms. Currently, there are about 3500 rooms.

27. If the BCA is now currently a trade organization by their own admission. Why are they allowed to choose players that represent the U.S. in world events?

28. The BCA strayed from its historical mission by becoming a trade organization. STUPID. This move has caused much disarray in pool.

29. Valley Tables/Leagues and the creation of the John Lewis run BCA (not BCAPL) pool leagues were two of the best things that happened to pool.

30. In 1986, Resorts, Int. in Atlantic City put on the first “Last Call for 9-Ball” tournament and had 364 players. Last year’s US Open only had 237 entrants.

31. No smoking laws put a hit on the pool rooms. There is nothing that can be done now, the laws are hardly going to be repealed especially over the plight of such low status pool rooms. Deal with it and go after the new customers.

32. New customers will not stay if they can’t make balls.

33. According to the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association (SGMA) study in 2008, Billiards/Pool ranked 10th in the country for participation at some 17,178,000 players that averaged playing 13 days a year. .

34. Participation growth is stagnant or in decline.

35. I get sick when I see a BCAPL player go to the national tournament, play on a Diamond table, hit a long rail ball into the 1st diamond by the pocket and can’t figure out why it isn’t going.

36. I don’t like the way the game is played today.

37. Every game on TV has stats and player background to back-up the announcers ---except pool. Did Accu-stats forget their mission? Player stat sheets should be part of every tournament and sent in to an independent national entity. Players then ranked by the hard stats.

38. I hate when I hear someone say the cure that pool needs is another blockbuster, epic movie. A movie would help the pool business but wouldn’t cure ills.

39. All the “fighting” rules need to be changed.

40. Grow pool from the bottom up, not the top down.
 
I've been playing for 50 years and I agree with most of what you say. I won't nit pick on a few of them because overall you have it right.
Pool made it's own reputation as a some what sleazy game and has paid the price thru the years.
Almost with out exception when I mention to a non pool person that I play pool they almost always ask "Are you a pool shark?" or "Are you a hustler?"That is the general outlook of pool by the non pool playing person.
Until this perception of pool changes with the ordinary person this game will continue to struggle.
I do try to support my local rooms by playing in tournaments and buying food and beverages while I'm playing.
If my local room would sell cues,cases and accessories at internet pricing I would buy from them. I can't afford to pay 20 % more just to support the room,just can't do it.
 
Golf courses are made tougher for professional tournaments. The cup is the same, but tees are further back and roughs are higher, etc.
 
good post

some very good points here. i like 4, 9, 10, and 22. in response to #4, i would like to think that there isn't very much luck in darts, if indeed you want to call that a sport.
 
some very good points here. i like 4, 9, 10, and 22. in response to #4, i would like to think that there isn't very much luck in darts, if indeed you want to call that a sport.

hand /eye coordination , depth perception , physical prowess ~ its as much a sport as pool . . . .:D
 
Last edited:
Darts is a game of luck. Luck that I can hit the dart board instead of planting one into your drywall.
 
I'll jump you on #1 - I'd say there are many more than 50 - you just seldom see them in the same place at the same time , because the financial rewards really aren't there to devote all their time to chasing tournaments .
 
Easy to agree on most of those points BUT:

#8. What is your solution?
#11. The BEF does have a full time presenter and does exactly what you are suggesting.
#13. P.A.T.
#21. Go read the Industry specs, here you are wrong.
#27. Because the BCA represents the WPA for the USA.
#29. John Lewis is the ACS.
#35. Me too.
#36. Play it your way, who cares! Maybe change it.
#40. AMEN, preach on my brother.

Randy Goettlicher
BCA Master Instructor
BEF Master of Ceremonies
Writer of BCA Rules
 
THIS!!!

27. If the BCA is now currently a trade organization by their own admission. Why are they allowed to choose players that represent the U.S. in world events?
 
I have to go along with #36.
I just feel the game has outgrown Texas Express. As randy points, what is your solution? i don't have the answer but I have thought about it alot.
There is little for the pros to do now and make a living and I lived close enough to that life to fell for them. Now they prey on the regional tours and I don't blame them at all.
If we are going to continue to groom up and comers, I flle something is going to have to happen to level that field.
One solution I had was shorter races to make it more competitive and damned if it wasn't the mid-level players who opposed that the most. Shorter the race, the better their chance.
Other than that I have not come up with it. The handicap system? I would rather eat dirt!!
Even though in the pro level, Texas Express has grown very old and far too predictable. Like Allen Hopkins says 50,000 times per year, just get the cue ball to center table and he is out. That is not a knock on Allen either, he speaks the obvious!
Like i said, I 'm not sure what, but I feel a major overhaul is needed!
JMO!
 
Answers for my buddy Randy

#8. I suggest going back to ball in hand in the kitchen and reinstitute the 3 foul rule for 8 ball. It's not the best but it is a start. At least it's not giving up a pretty sure win.

#11. I'm truly glad to hear of it. We have a school system that needs to be approached as the bowling alley they used for that lifetime sport went down because of the smoking laws. But.....if I don't know this info, and I keep my ear pretty close to the grindstone, who knows? That is except you whose ears must be pretty well ground off.

#13. Randy, I'm talking about SVB's lifetime B & R %, avg. balls made on the break, etc. Pool has a lot of interesting stats if they were only tracked. If the APA can track stats with amatuer players, surely the pros can do it. I would love to hear commentators talk about those stats than hear the nothingness dribble that has nothing to do with pool. Not mentioning some names, TAR, NWPA and more.

#21. I'm referring to tight pockets (4.5"). See thread: Tight pockets.

#27. I realize that was the WPA's choice, but the BCA should have declined and let an organization that interacts with players do it. AZ is as much or more of an authority than the BCA on this issue.

#29. John Lewis ran the now defunct BCA leagues (not to be confused with the present BCAPL league, but it is confusing when I know what P (player) and L (league) stand for but what then does BCA stand for when they are not a part of the BCA?) for many years and brought much of what we now take for granted in other league organizations.

#35 : )

#36. Trying to.

#40. : )
 
BBC snooker coverage has technology called Hawkeye.
It can give a cue ball perspective of the table, and show the path of balls with different contact.

Commentators use an illustrator.
Seems to have disappeared from pool after The Black Widow's artistic attempt.:D
 
BBC snooker coverage has technology called Hawkeye.
It can give a cue ball perspective of the table, and show the path of balls with different contact.

Commentators use an illustrator.
Seems to have disappeared from pool after The Black Widow's artistic attempt.:D

Would love to see a link to something on youtube or the net in general that shows the technology.

Pat at Accustats has his own personal wizard, Merlin no less, who may be able to figure it out.

Maybe it's something that wouldn't break the bank.
 
billiard education foundation #11

Randy, I looked all over the BEF site and found nothing on people to make presentations to school boards. Can you point me to that info? I'm sure others would like to know also.

Oh-oh, gripe #41. Why aren't the BEF nationals held in a pool room with 20 some like 9 footers? The rooms are the ones that help develop these kids and then the tournament is held at a university. I imagine qualifying rooms would love to bid for a chance to have a full room for a week during the summer.
 
Back
Top