The pro's can get the easy draw just as quick as the amateurs.
I may agree with seeding the top 16 or 24 players evenly among brackets but then you could use random draw.
The problem with seeding is there is no one official ranking system.
Sounds to me like the ABP wants to make sure they have an unfair advantage to cash.
Random draw means every player no matter their skill level or political connections have exactly the same chance of winning.
Seeding without official rankings is to easy to be called into question about the fairness of the seeding.
I agree with seeding when it is done in a professional tournament. This however, is not a professional tournament. Out of a full field of 256, how many actually have a chance to win, maybe 40? ....
With "professional" being the keyword here. I agree with you. In a way, though this is one of the most prestigious tournaments in the world, the title of which is every pool player's dream to achieve, there is no such thing as a professional tournament that would allow, say, me to compete in it by allowing me to pay the entry fee as the only qualification.
Then again, isn't that what professional pool is? No other "sport," if I can call pool a sport, has tournaments where railbirds like me can qualify by just paying the entry fee. It's a double-edged sword.![]()
The fact that you can enter simply by paying the entry fee is what makes this a true "Open" tournament. "Open" means anyone is free to enter and you don't have to be a member of some special organization (UPA, ABP, WPA) to enter. You pay your money and take your best shot. I think this makes the U.S. Open 9 Ball Championship special.
Let me know when you find a true "Open" tournament, of this size, in any other sport.
Just look to golf... The US Open is open... All you have to do is play in regionals events to get into the final fieldThe fact that you can enter simply by paying the entry fee is what makes this a true "Open" tournament. "Open" means anyone is free to enter and you don't have to be a member of some special organization (UPA, ABP, WPA) to enter. You pay your money and take your best shot. I think this makes the U.S. Open 9 Ball Championship special.
Let me know when you find a true "Open" tournament, of this size, in any other sport.
One reason why it's so hard to make a living at playing pool is because the prize fund payouts are so lopsided in favor of the top spots.
Shown below is the payout distribution for this year's U.S. Open. For a traveling player to break even on expenses, they probably need to make a minimum of $1500. So the players finishing 33-96th are breaking even or perhaps taking a modest loss. Players finishing as high as 9th-32nd place might make a profit of $1000 or less after expenses. Not bad but certainly not enough to live on.
I hope Barry will consider raising the payouts from the bottom up rather than from the top down. The 49th-64th places, for example, could pay out $1500 so that more players can come closer to breaking even on expenses. Other payouts from the bottom up could also be progressively increased even if it means paying out less on the very top spots.
Another suggestion might be to increase the payouts for the players in the upper middle of the payout distribution, say from 7th-24th places.
IMO, the goal should be to help other players besides the very top players make a living at the game.
Here is the full breakdown:
1st $30,000.00
2nd $15,000.00
3rd $8,000.00
4th $6,000.00
5th-6th $4,500.00 each
7th-8th $3,500.00 each
9th-12th $2,500.00 each
13th-16th $2,250.00 each
17th-24th $2,000.00 each
25th-32nd $1,750.00 each
33rd-48th $1,500.00 each
49th-64th $1,250.00 each
65th-96th $1,000.00 each
One reason why it's so hard to make a living at playing pool is because the prize fund payouts are so lopsided in favor of the top spots. <snip>
What an awesome post, I couldn't agree more!I have a few bones of contention on the subject of seeding and since I am not anywhere on the positive poster list I guess as usual I won't pull punches.....
First off the guys that said playing in the open is now off the bucket list likely would have never showed to start with... If you have been before and played you would know that the US Open has always been seeded... Based on that fact your boycott is meaningless......
Now from a spectators point of view since apparently many of you are making assumptions.... The first 2 days attendance at the Open are dismal.... People want to come watch their favorites battle it out with known players.... Not seeding may lead you to think well no seeding might change that but it's a long tourney and many people come for the final few days because they KNOW they will get to see premiere matchups.....
Even with seedings last year I think at least 2 seeded players were knocked into the losers bracket in the first round.... The year Mika come all the way from the losers bracket he was seeded because he had won the prior year...... Chris Bartram was unseeded and knocked him into the losers bracket...
Most of the guys that show up can flat out play.... Sure some show up because they just want to be a part of it and know they can't win but they get out there and try and try and when they fail they have earned my respect and some get to go home with great stories.....
You wanna go home and tell your friends you went 2 and out against 2 players they never heard of or you wanna tell em how you were even with SVB at 4-4 before he ran off and hid from you or how you took someone they have heard of down or to the hill.....
The only guys I usually hear complain about draws and seeding are the short stops that have been around the game long enough to know that a soft bracket can put extra money in their pocket..... I have no idea how many local tournaments I have won but I would hazard a guess that the draw helped me in about half of them.... The lure of an easy draw is always a motivating factor for the lesser player to throw his chips in.....
More years ago then I can count I went to the Music City and finished in the top 8... I was a fearless shotmaker but that me would need tons of weight from me in my current version but because of my draw I only had to get thru 1 known player.... I played 2 years ago and went 3-2 getting beaten by Max Eberle and Rob Saez...... The pressure of playing those professionals was worth the price of entry...... It shook me to my core in anxiety and confidence......
And that's what it takes if you want to be a seeded player... You have to beat your competition and you have to beat the voices inside your head that tell you you can't.....
If seeding scares you then by all means sit at home on the porch.... If you want to see what you are truly made of and determine if you are as good as you want to think you are jump in with both feet....
If you want soft brackets play locally.... There are tons of small ponds out there where you can be the "Big" fish....... The stories you will get to tell will be way less interesting but you can at least feel like you were always a winner..........
I agree with this logic too! :smile:
My only issue with seeding is the fact that the seeding is going to determined from several different sources (including the ABP, which automatically raises flags).
This raises too many questions of favoritism, to me. If there is/was an established player ranking system, like all the other major sports use, I would have no issue with seeding. It is simple, you look at the list, the current top however-many players get the seeds. In this scenario, you have these decisions made from at least 4 sources, and Barry himself. So basically those making the decisions can find a way to justify seeding whoever they please.
Now before Jay comes on here to defend the Berhmans, I respect jay's judgement in this area as much as anyone. If I had to pick one person to make such a judgement, I think jay would likely be that person. Still, I dont like how such a scenario "could" be manipulated. Not to suggest that jay (or the Berhmans) would do such a thing, its just that it "could" happen, or leave open the suspicion of favoritism. I don't think pool needs the "strife"....
They've always seeded the open. Usually, it was done behind closed doors by the TD, Barry, et al.
Nothing wrong with it in my book
It is the standard in a lot of sports