You know why everyone wants to be good guys to the top guys? Because they are the reason the event is there in the first place. No one came to watch this tournament to see a bunch of guys they don't know play pool. No one pays money for a PPV to watch guys they have never heard of. And if you dont turn some money on the gate by people paying to watch you will not see that tournament ever again which means the normal guy will never have a chance to play in it again either.Jay, there is no phone call that makes it right and fair to the opponent. It's like being a supervisor at work: whatever the company policy is for, lets say emergency leave, are the rules for all your employees, no exceptions. Because the second you make one exception, every single employee thinks that their personal emergency is equally dire and also worthy of exemption: problems with a spouse; day care center had water damage; dead car battery; death of a third cousin; and on and on. The *only* way to be fair is to stick to the rules.
I personally believe that scheduling exceptions to the rules, particularly for higher profile players, is one of the things that is wrong with our sport. Everyone wants to be a good guy with the Ralfs, the Earls, the Johnnys, and the Mika and give them the benefit of the doubt. But that is not fair.
At the player's meeting for the 1pocket we were told that the official clock was the one on the tournament room wall. If you weren't there at your appointed match time, by that clock, you began to forfeit games. If you cared, you set your wrist watch to the time on that clock, and were in place well before your match time, or lived with the consequences.
That's fair.
Lou Figueroa
Everyone talks about wanting pro pool to be bigger and get more exposure, well to do that you need stars and sometimes stars get more rolls than the guy in the catering truck.
I'm not talking about pushing a match because some guy stayed up shooting dice all night and missed his start time. I'm talking about just this type of situation. And it is a rare one. I think it was handled well. The TD did make a decision. He made a decision to do what he could within the bounds of common sense to try and get one of the highest profile matches in tournament to get played rather than never happen. They gave Corey the option to push to 3PM or go at 12:30 as scheduled. They were asking Corey if he wanted to help out a fellow pro and the event or not. He chose not too. And had every right and should not be talked bad about because of it. The TD could have TOLD Corey "You are being pushed to 3" Its that golden rule thing. But they didnt.
The CSI group runs the tightest events in the U.S. They do what they can for people within the bounds of common sense and what the rules allow. They want to keep everyone as happy as possible and believe me, I know the TD's, they will whack a top guys pee pee in a minute if they have to. No one is star struck.
Overall I think it was handled as best as could be expected when you take into account all of the variables and time lines involved.