Agree or disagree with Grady - many of you are missing the point. Someone with multiple world championships (at any game) shouldn't worry about an invite ever. Whether or not he can win, the crowd loves to watch older legends get into the pit with younger competition. We got to see a little of it in the IPT - and we loved it.
The argument of "a younger player should get that spot who has a chance to win" is ridiculous - just create more spots. I think if you're a former world champion at any game - you have a chance to win. You might be a huge underdog, but you have a prayer. If you were looking to bet on Watson a week ago, what do you think you could have pulled-in as far as odds go?!?
Our sport doesn't do a good job in paying homage to our great players. When the Masters lets Nicklaus, Player, and Palmer tee off in the first grouping----- does ANYONE HERE ON AZB THINK THOSE OLD F's HAVE A PRAYER TO WIN!??!??? ANYONE? It's not the point. It's respect for the game and respect for the legends. How big do you think the galleries are around those guys who have no shot to win? I went to the Masters one year and let me tell you---- you can't get close to them and everyone watched them hack up the course and stood in awe with love and admiration.
Would'ves and Could'ves don't really matter--- it's WHAT IS that counts. It's sad to see Grady get on here and post how he should be able to play. If pool was more organized like golf, he probably would be able to play. Let's face it, the pool industry is a cannabalistic, siloed, insular and backward/sideways-looking sector. If pool were innovative, the organizing bodies would pull off IPT-like events that allowed any HOFer automatic/free entry, legend $$$ players CHEAP entry and seed all of them against the normal modern players. Imagine how marketable the videos would be?
Instead, pool is on the verge with tournaments going away, pool halls disappearing and few younger players getting involved. We need guys like Grady, McCready, Varner, Hopkins, Hall, and all the other geriatric players who I'd rather watch than any younger guy. Tournaments are BORING without them - plain and simple. Whoever manages the world 14.1 is eating their young by being dicks and not allowing former world champions, legends, HOFers, and the likes to play.
Keep b1tching Grady---- eventually some business neophyte at the world 14.1 office and get a bright idea to incorporate what I just posted. When it does happen, it's likely because you b1tched and opened up their blind eyes.
P.S.
Gee, if I recall, the last time I went to the Derby I watched Grady take Efren to the hill at some bank pool. Imagine that?
Per Wikipedia, this is a list of Grady's titles.
Titles
1983 Red's Open One-pocket (Houston, Texas)
1984 World One-pocket
1984 River City Open One-pocket (Austin, Texas)
1984 Busch World Nine-ball (Moline, Illinois)
1985 Red's Open One-pocket (Houston, Texas)
1995 Legends of One-pocket (Olathe, Kansas)
As you can see, a total of 6 titles are atributed to Grady and none of them are in straight pool. In fact, 5 out of the 6 titles are in one-pocket with the sixth being in 9 ball. He hasn't won any straight pool title at all and he hasn't won any title in the last 14 years.
Yes, Grady is a gambler and a road player of note, however, his skills have long since faded. He is not the player he once was. Grady recently played in the Maryland Straight Pool Championship and he was eliminated in day one. He didn't even make an appearance on day to for the sake of his devoted fans.
Grady is definitely one of the legends of pool, however, that is not a qualification for being invited to a world championship tournament. I repeat, he has never won a straight pool championship and he has not won any championship of any kind in the last 14 years.
I'd be the first to say, I don't agree with the way Charlie Williams and his Dragon Promotions do things, but I have to agree that Grady does not deserve an invitation to the World Championship.
I also have to add, there are probably a dozen players who should be invited long before Grady, inlcuding our own Steve Lipsky.