I'm so excited to see larger purse in pool thanks to the Saudi Arabia-Matchroom contract, a first with this kind of dough since the IPT. When the International Pool Tour first his the scene with its big money and motto of "real pool, real rules, real money," pool players of all caliber were coming out of the woodwork: road warriors, action players, retired pros, league players, and recreational shooters. This was a good thing at the time and gave pool players hope around the world. As we all know, it didn't pan out.
A few years ago, Matchroom pushed its players to interact with fans on social media to help the sport, and they all complied, but it's fizzled out with most of them today. When Shane Van Boening posts a thread, within seconds, he receives a thousand-plus likes, and it keeps growing and growing and growing. It's the same with a few of the other super stars in the pool world today.
There are some pool stars who still enjoy interacting with their fans on social media, like Rodney Morris, Savannah Easton, Kelly Fisher, David Alcaide, Alex Kazakis, Oscar Dominguez, just to name a few. There are others who could care less about who likes their threads or says "congratulations" a hundred times or more when they do well in a tournament. I'm sure it's because they don't have time to hit the like button on a thousand posts in their thread, like Shane's exploding threads. I definitely get that.
Learning how to navigate status as a public figure is uncharted waters for the pool professional and will be a challenge for sure. Ronnie Wiseman's quote about everything's funny when you're winning big money is true, but some may not know how to handle it. I am reminded of Belgium's Luca Brecel's World Snooker Championship win when he purchased a $300,000 car after he won $500,000. He hasn't won a tournament or championship title since.
I want to see pool as a sport get respect it deserves, and I especially want to see our pros enjoy a good lifestyle and be rewarded for their years of dedication to their career. Some pros have a good family structure, a spouse, to help them manage fame and money. It would be nice to there were counselors or agents to help the pros in the future so that they don't fumble and be left with nothing in their senior years. Ronnie O'Sullivan has an agent, as do some other pros in the snooker world. When the IPT was born, Mark Trainor signed up quite a few IPT members with a contract to be their agent.
With the rising purses in pool, do you think pool's pros will need agents like other sports celebrities have today? It would help with travel expenses and managing their careers. Thoughts?
A few years ago, Matchroom pushed its players to interact with fans on social media to help the sport, and they all complied, but it's fizzled out with most of them today. When Shane Van Boening posts a thread, within seconds, he receives a thousand-plus likes, and it keeps growing and growing and growing. It's the same with a few of the other super stars in the pool world today.
There are some pool stars who still enjoy interacting with their fans on social media, like Rodney Morris, Savannah Easton, Kelly Fisher, David Alcaide, Alex Kazakis, Oscar Dominguez, just to name a few. There are others who could care less about who likes their threads or says "congratulations" a hundred times or more when they do well in a tournament. I'm sure it's because they don't have time to hit the like button on a thousand posts in their thread, like Shane's exploding threads. I definitely get that.
Learning how to navigate status as a public figure is uncharted waters for the pool professional and will be a challenge for sure. Ronnie Wiseman's quote about everything's funny when you're winning big money is true, but some may not know how to handle it. I am reminded of Belgium's Luca Brecel's World Snooker Championship win when he purchased a $300,000 car after he won $500,000. He hasn't won a tournament or championship title since.
I want to see pool as a sport get respect it deserves, and I especially want to see our pros enjoy a good lifestyle and be rewarded for their years of dedication to their career. Some pros have a good family structure, a spouse, to help them manage fame and money. It would be nice to there were counselors or agents to help the pros in the future so that they don't fumble and be left with nothing in their senior years. Ronnie O'Sullivan has an agent, as do some other pros in the snooker world. When the IPT was born, Mark Trainor signed up quite a few IPT members with a contract to be their agent.
With the rising purses in pool, do you think pool's pros will need agents like other sports celebrities have today? It would help with travel expenses and managing their careers. Thoughts?
Last edited: