SpiderWebComm said:OOPS it posted twice by accident. My bad. <DELETED>
Well, I, for one, think it is worthy of posting it twice.

JAM
SpiderWebComm said:OOPS it posted twice by accident. My bad. <DELETED>
JAM said:Goodness gracious, it is no wonder that so many British, European, Filipino, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese players come to the United States to compete on American soil on a repetitive basis.
Oh my, is the grass truly not greener on the other side?
America opens her doors and welcomes pool players from around the world. There must be some underlying reason they flock our shores. Some even choose to live here. Gee whiz, I wonder why.
JAM
Blackjack said:Back into the killfile. Gee whiz, I wonder why?
JAM said:Goodness gracious, it is no wonder that so many British, European, Filipino, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese players come to the United States to compete on American soil on a repetitive basis.
Oh my, is the grass truly not greener on the other side?
America opens her doors and welcomes pool players from around the world. There must be some underlying reason they flock our shores. Some even choose to live here. Gee whiz, I wonder why.
JAM
crosseyedjoe said:I can not speak for the Europeans, but for the Filipinos , yes it is truly greener on the other side. For most Asian nations, the prestige of whoopin' American ass counts big time. (sorry can't help). It helps the person's career in his/her own country.
spadevil said:I liked the idea of Paul Newman being inducted, that would be a great idea in light of the current state pool is in. The press alone would help the sport no end and give it some much needed exposure.
spadevil said:This has been one good forum to read.![]()
JAM, I think the US players let themselves down at times because they dont like to venture outside their own backyard to compete at overseas events and this is partly down to expenses and prize money on offer & the fact they probably dont rate the events as highly - would this be correct?
I overheard some US IPT players state this for the ONLY overseas event planned (London).
This is way off topic but part of the reason why non US players are being inducted. They got off their backsides and made the trip to the USA to compete in OPEN events and won some of them.
ThOne is correct in summarising the Euro Tour above which is open to all.
I think there is a genreal consesous that the US should have its own national events restricted and this would be a good way forward.
Back on topic, OO has had a fantastic career but it's not quite over and he's still pretty young in comparison to the older US players mentioned who IMO should get the nod beforehand.
I liked the idea of Paul Newman being inducted, that would be a great idea in light of the current state pool is in. The press alone would help the sport no end and give it some much needed exposure.
After all, it's called the "Billiard's Congress of Amercia - Hall of Fame".![]()
Blackjack said:Does anybody have a clue as to why Newman has never been nominated for the HOF?
To me, Paul Newman seems like an obvious choice and he would be a shoe-in vote. It would really bring a lot to the game IMO - and Lord knows we could really use something like that to jump start the game's popularity.
sjm said:I'd rather induct Tom Cruise, who has a bigger following than Newman these days. Fifteen years ago, my choice would have been Newman, but this is all about maximizing publicity.
TheOne said:The EuroTour certainly isn't the most diverse tournament on the planet, even though it probably has players from 50 countries players on it, most Asians and Americans don't bother. Why, maybe the fact that the risk rewards are just to great, although I suspect the some may just not like European Camels !![]()
I know Mika struggled on it to even make the top 32, SEE Huidji who just came 2nd in a world championships has a best of 9th on any Euro Tour recently. GAMA Manuel who came 5th in the 10 ball world cahmps has a best of 49th! BOYES Karl who kicked ass on the IPT has finished 65th in has last two tries and marcus Chamat has only made the last 32 one out of his last 32 attempts.
There is no question the EuroTour as the toughest tour on the planet.
As for the German titles, there is no question German as a pool playing nation is as good if not better than the US in recent times. If an American, lets say Kieth Reyes won only 10 American (closed US Nationals only fields) titles I think there would be an aweful lot of people calling for an iduction to a certain famous hall!![]()
Terry Ardeno said:Part of the title in this thread was the HOF. This may be slightly off the subject, but I do believe it to be true nonetheless.
Part of the reason American pool is in the shape it's in has to lie with the BCA. It claims to be the governing body of pool, i.e., The Billiard Congress of America. I have been fond of calling it the Billiard Congress of Amateur pool, because they have seemingly abandoned promoting professional pool.
I know, they now promote the Enjoy.com / BCA Open 9 Ball Championship.
But let's go back...from 1966-1977 the BCA promoted the annual U.S. Open 14.1 Championships. Then, from 1978-1982, nothing. They held a U.S. Open 14.1 Championship in 1983, then nothing again until 1989 when Ortmann won his first such title. Then, no tournaments again until 1992, when Sigel won, followed by Ortmann again in 1993. From 1994-1999, none were held. In 2000, thanks in large part to Blatt Billiards, the BCA held a U.S. Open 14.1 Championship. And then 7 more years and counting with no more 14.1 Championships. So from 1978 until 2007, they've held 5 "annual" U.S. Open 14.1 tournaments. Or, said another way, 17 tournaments in 41 years. Don't think from that time that they switched their support to 9 ball. The BCA Open 9 Ball Championship wasn't held until 1999. So what service do they provide for American pro pool players?
If someone thinks it's because of a lck of sponsors, please....if the sanctioning bodies of rodeo and chess and spelling bee's can get sponsors, why not our governing body? Are we to believe that nobody likes pool? And anyway, whose job is it to elicit sponsorship for proposed tournaments? And another thing, the HOF does not even exist. There's no building to visit. Our HOF for pool players consists of one paragraph on a single piece of paper in a file cabinet somewhere. I called the BCA several times over the years looking for stats on certain players or tournaments and NEVER got the information. They don't have it. But that's "our" santioning body...
Here is a thread that a friend of mine from Philly (EL'nino) started some time back re: the politic to get into this hallowed hall of fame...
http://forums.azbilliards.com/showthread.php?p=293959#post293959
Part of the title in this thread was the HOF. This may be slightly off the subject, but I do believe it to be true nonetheless.
Part of the reason American pool is in the shape it's in has to lie with the BCA. It claims to be the governing body of pool, i.e., The Billiard Congress of America. I have been fond of calling it the Billiard Congress of Amateur pool, because they have seemingly abandoned promoting professional pool.
I know, they now promote the Enjoy.com / BCA Open 9 Ball Championship.
But let's go back...from 1966-1977 the BCA promoted the annual U.S. Open 14.1 Championships. Then, from 1978-1982, nothing. They held a U.S. Open 14.1 Championship in 1983, then nothing again until 1989 when Ortmann won his first such title. Then, no tournaments again until 1992, when Sigel won, followed by Ortmann again in 1993. From 1994-1999, none were held. In 2000, thanks in large part to Blatt Billiards, the BCA held a U.S. Open 14.1 Championship. And then 7 more years and counting with no more 14.1 Championships. So from 1978 until 2007, they've held 5 "annual" U.S. Open 14.1 tournaments. Or, said another way, 17 tournaments in 41 years. Don't think from that time that they switched their support to 9 ball. The BCA Open 9 Ball Championship wasn't held until 1999. So what service do they provide for American pro pool players?
If someone thinks it's because of a lck of sponsors, please....if the sanctioning bodies of rodeo and chess and spelling bee's can get sponsors, why not our governing body? Are we to believe that nobody likes pool? And anyway, whose job is it to elicit sponsorship for proposed tournaments? And another thing, the HOF does not even exist. There's no building to visit. Our HOF for pool players consists of one paragraph on a single piece of paper in a file cabinet somewhere. I called the BCA several times over the years looking for stats on certain players or tournaments and NEVER got the information. They don't have it. But that's "our" santioning body...
Here is a thread that a friend of mine from Philly (EL'nino) started some time back re: the politic to get into this hallowed hall of fame...
http://forums.azbilliards.com/showth...959#post293959
worriedbeef said:sad to think that they are our wonderful games', governing body.