breakup said:Just thought I would give this a little bump. Here is the anonymous road player at the IPT tourney.
AzHousePro said:Hey gang, I have one that I really want to get off my chest. I received the usual slew of tourney results from this weekend and received the following picture from one of the tour events.
It seems that the winner is a road player and doesn't want his picture on the internet (presumably because it will kill his action).
The room owner and sponsors of the tour added money and/or product to make the event a success and they do that in exchange for the promotion from the event. I assume this player didn't offer to give the money back that he won since he was not allowing the tour to promote those sponsors properly.
Am I wrong at thinking this sort of thing is very 'dark ages' and is doing nothing at all for the game of pool?
Mike
LOL, I was thinking about this old thread last night when I was going through the photo gallery.....breakup said:Just thought I would give this a little bump. Here is the anonymous road player at the IPT tourney.
I haven't read this whole thread since it's inception but I can say that I never had a problem with him and I don't really recall anyone else having a problem with him and the kind of person that he is.Michael Webb said:I know everyone has their opinions, so here's mine. I have known Gary for quite a while and he has always been a gentleman to me. He's welcome at my house anytime he's in town.
jay helfert said:Mike my feeling is, if you want to hide in the bushes, so be it. But if you want to come out and play tournaments you're going be "outed". You can't have it both ways.
The greatest hustler of all time was Jack Cooney. He didn't show his face around a tournament for over 25 years. Even some top players did not know what he looked like. He knew that when he finally came to tournaments like in Olathe and Louisville, his charade was over. He hid himself from public scrutiny for a long time and then made the decision to come out in the open.
Tournament is a tournament is a tournament. You want to include only the few that are similar, then make a list of only the people invited. Otherwise, if there's money involved, eventually a real player will hear about it and show up. Play and practice more and these guys won't intimidate you. If you don't take pool serious, why are you playing in a tournament? You want to get better, then play better players. I get flack for playing in quite a few bar tourneys, also. Hey, what else is a player to do? Sit around and hear "Six, seven and the break, you got me!" all night. Or should everyone who is not quite a pro, but better than a bar beater, just give up the game? Hey, what about poker? Yeah, that's the ticket. Poker. That's why pool is where it is today. Nobody wants to take the time and effort to be a "player." They can pick up a deck of cards and jump right in. I was a c, then a b, and now that I can make a few balls, pool dies. That is just my .02.bobroberts said:I will chime in here with my 2 cents.If a guy is playing on a pro level then he has no right playing in a local tournament.Most local tournaments are for decent players who play on a weekend and want to match up with a likewise player not some guy who is looking at it as a easy paycheck.
And thats MHO
CrownCityCorey said:You don't want to be known, stay out of the tournament scene!
Awesome thought! Here are my picks, given GARY ABOOD'S IPT matchups:buzzsaw said:I think we're missing the real opportunity here. Has anyone ever watched Mexican Pro Wrestling? They wear those real crazy looking masks. Then no one would know who they were. This guy is just out there on the cutting edge.
The pros could start body slamming each other in the middle of the match. (You know what they say a good defense is better than a good offense.)