Yes, a sports bar has more appeal. My last room had fourteen TV's, including four big screens (50-60") and one giant (8') screen. We had ALL sports on all day long. Baseball, basketball, football and maybe a little hockey. That's about it. You could watch a television from any place in the room (covered 7,000 square feet). When the Lakers played we were packed! Same for pro football, especially the Monday night game.
Everyone was eating pizza, drinking beer, shooting pool and sweating the game. I had a hard core of maybe fifty to sixty regulars, who were into pool. Many of them bought monthly passes to play all day. The other 80% of my business was the casual player, usually two guys or couples. Sometimes several guys would come in together or two couples on a night out. Four guys sharing a table that was $8 an hour IS a cheap date!
I had only two league nights and they played on my two bar tables. If I were to do it again I would probably have more bar tables, maybe four to eight. Eric is in a special class of individual who is used to making big money. I'm not. A few thou a week is a good pay check for me. But I live a middle class life style, no mansion or Rolls in the driveway. For most of us I would think that making a nice six figure income and doing something you enjoy is pretty rewarding. It can be done.
But make no mistake, owning and running a poolroom/sports bar is not an easy job. You will be working long hours, with 50-60 hours a week the average, sometimes more. Remember you have to pick up supplies nearly every day. And you hire the employees, make the schedule and do the payroll every week. My last room was small but I still had eight employees. A lot of hours to cover, And we needed two people working every night.
John Schmidt will find out it's no piece of cake, but he may find that he can make a better living than simply playing pool. I know I did!![]()
This all sounds good. The template you describe was good for the 80s, 90s, and maybe up to 2001. Don't count on this being a viable working plan today. Around this vast country, there are anecdotal thriving businesses like the one you described in your post. Overall, just because it worked then does not mean it will work now.
If this idea was so great, it would already be working everywhere and there would be more looking to open. This is old. We are losing numbers. If you want to open a room, you better have and be something different. Take a gamble and bet on an offbeat idea that you think might work or at least attach pool to a concept that is growing and gaining in popularity. If you succeed, everyone will benefit.
I have enormous respect for the the life long hard work and intentions of the influential, powerful, and wise people of our game. At the same time, I want to survive and I recognize that these folks have been the stewards of this sinking ship for a lot of years. I will listen but I will not follow their lead.