NUMMY,
Cudo's on hittin it outa the park!! GR8 concept![]()
You got the money to back it?
NUMMY,
Cudo's on hittin it outa the park!! GR8 concept![]()
The BCA organization, which is supposed to be the North American representative organization for pool, should rename themselves to represent their true interests as the Billiard Industry Members Congress of America. They provide little to no benefit to professional pool in these United States.
The WPA benefits the countries that support their organization quite handsomely.
The pool culture has a selective memory. In the year 2011, it is customary to celebrate pool players who have deep pockets and cannot run three balls in a row and/or B players with huge egos who won't get action without a handicap.The fearless road player of the '80s who played ALL GAMES on ALL EQUIPMENT is gone, and the American tournament soldier of 2011 is the last of a dying breed.
We are a country with no governing body in pool. The governing body we have now is getting fat from a huge pie they gorge on that is provided to them by its BCA industry members, while Americans pros are scrambling for any leftover crumbs that fall from the BCA's plate.
Let's tell it like it is, shall we?
am countin as i type![]()
Well I think we should really tell it like it is. And that is nobody gives a crap about professional pool. And by nobody I mean anyone not part of the tiny, gritty, pro pool clique. That's the problem not the BCA or any other promoter.
As Justin says, the pool tournament is not a viable revenue generator. To have positive revenue in sports you need numbers. There are no numbers because nobody cares. Nobody deserves numbers you have to earn it.
Alot of people don't care because of the attitudes represented by JAM up above. If you're not a hustlin, lying road player you aint part of pool. If you are a league player or a person who wants to play for fun you're a waste.
One person on this thread has already said that professional pool/players do nothing to promote pool. And that's the undeniable truth. All they seem to be interested in fighting and scrapping over the tiny amount of money there is and who gets it.
If "professional pool players'' promoted the game at all maybe some numbers might be generated to support them. But I doubt it. One of the successful business models - the APA - is always trashed by the real pool players and other promoters because they make money. Mark G. has a tremendous event in May in Vegas each year but the participants there don't care about the pros. And you never see the pros in there doing anything to support the game.
So all this whining about how bad it is for pool players and promoters do this and that, well, you all deserve what you get. I say blame the other guy or woman. It couldn't possible be that I'm a large part of the problem. Keep going the way you're going and you'll kill the game altogether. That's more likely to happen than professional pool players and their FANS coming together to work WITH league players and regional amateurs to change the game in a positive way.
I may be the only one with this mindset, but a post dated check is still getting paid, right? If I won 25k or whatever but I gotta wait two months to get it, I'll still be happy.
As long as Barry owe em, they are never broke.
To me it's like the lotto. If you win $200 from a scratch off, you get paid right there at the gas station. If you win $50k, you gotta send it in and wait.
Very well written!
I've tried to get the top 16 players in Norway to visit youthclubs 4 times a year. Youthclubs in Norway normally have a pooltable, but no one knows how to use it.
If those 16 players visited 1 youthclub each, 4 times a year, showing them some tricks, hold a tournament for them etc, we might get 50 new youth players every year, maybe even more.
But those 16 players just laugh at me when I say this, because "there's nothing in it for me".
Well, if they would listen to me and do this, we would have monthly ranking tournaments with 250 players in Norway in 2025, instead of 30-80 players like it is today.
Look at the FA Premier League, perhaps the most successful sports-industry in the world, English soccer.
30 years ago they travelled around all over Europe during their off-season and played friendly matches almost for free. They did this to market themselves, their club and the product they had. Later on they travelled to Asia, and now they travel to America.
FA Premier League have like 10-12 matches broadcasted live every single week from August till May all over the world, attracting hundreds of thousands spectators from all over the world every single week to their games.
Other great soccer-nations like Spain, Italy and Germany never cared about travelling around and marketing their product, and they are not even close to the FA Premier League when it comes to popularity, money and world-wide interest.
When the pro and semipro poolplayers realize that if they each teach 50 kids to play each year, many of those kids will pay entries to local, regional and national tournaments the coming years. If they are smart, they can sell clothes, poolcues etc to them too
And people ask me all the time.....why don't you go to that tounament??
Oh sure, can't wait!! Got to make It to what, the final 10 or 15 to break even.And then If I do, I might have to wait a few weeks or months to collect my $??? Think I'll just stay home and dig ditches and shovel manure. That way at least I know I will get the $. Boy, that really Is sad.
John Brumback
...Alot of people don't care because of the attitudes represented by JAM up above. If you're not a hustlin, lying road player you aint part of pool. If you are a league player or a person who wants to play for fun you're a waste....
This isnt a point by point reply to your post but it did get me thinking about some things.
I can think of only one group or entity that makes any serious money off pool and that is the APA. BCA has become a trade group with declining membership and a trade show on life support. I don't know any truly wealthy promoters who made their money from pool and maybe 10 or so players make six figures a year. Bottom line is there is no serious money in pool. At least not on this continent.
One day I tried to think of how many people or positions in the industry paid or made $100,000 a year. Looking at it that way is sobering. Almost everyone I know in the pool industry in this country is struggling. By struggling I mean only hanging on by their fingernails. Turning money to survive or going in debt seems to be the status quo.
One thing that is funny is that it seems when someone does find a way to make money in pool he/she is automatically looked on as a bad person. I have never seen a field of endeavor where someone succeeding is looked down upon like pool in this country. For instance I don't know how many times I have heard about all the money made from coin drop on tournaments. Evidently people think 40-200 pool tables magically pay for themselves and appear in a place for free. Numerous times I have asked people who complain questions like : What does it cost for fuel, tires, and insurance just on the truck that got the tables here? What does it cost to recover 200 pool tables a year? It's not hard to eat up the coin drop.
I see pool from both sides of the coin. The promoters and the players. The funny thing is each side thinks the other has it better. True story. I have heard promoters say "All the players have to do is show up, pay an entry, play their matches and then do whatever they want. I have to work for months ahead of time, risk many times a players expenses, and then work non-stop during the event and if it all goes well I get lucky and break even or make a few thousand dollars."
The players say "I have to pay travel, hotel, entry, play for a week solid against top players and then if all goes well I break even or make a few thousand dollars."
The thing is they both are kind of right.
The truth is the current tournament model just doesnt have enough money in it for anyone to do really well except for the elite players. Basically in this country you have hundreds of people (all the promoters and crews plus the "dead money" players who enter events) working to provide an opportunity for five people to make a living playing pool and 15 or 20 to hang on trying to make something happen.
I have said it before and until someone shows me different I'll keep believing it. Tournaments have not made financial sense for the last 30 years and they still don't today. Thats why the players are still playing for the same purses.
So why do promoters and players do it? I heard it put the best by Ric Jones of Bad Boys Billiard Productions a few weeks ago in Reno when we were setting up at midnight on Saturday. I was kind of b!tching like all pool people do about the money in the game and he said "Just shut up and accept it. Pool owns all of us."
There are lots of players and few promoters. Players can't afford to be selective when it comes to the high prize payout events. Players could set up challenge matches between each other and try to stream it from their pool hall and see how much money from web subscriptions they bring in.
The pool players tend to lack in adapting new technologies for profit purposes.
People that make promises and need more time to deliver happens frequently. Why should there be so much emphasis on one particular man? If he has habitual problems but has a history of involvement then it is reasonable to suggest he get help, restaff or take a vacation.
As for the players, they just want to go play great pool against great players and hope a few new people get some insight from their match-ups, and prize money paid on time helps to motivate them to make their match-ups interests.
There are players that want to compete and get paid, and promoters that want to make money from hosting great matches, like the IPT and those monumental and ultra rare matchups. The bottleneck problem is what happens if promoters don't make enough. It is a legitimate risk and a problem for the organizer not the players.
I agree 100%.
Make the fields 64 or even 32. Longer races or round robin play. Make being a pro mean something. No clue how to make it work financially because I dont think it can but it seems doing the same thing over and over doesn't work.