This is for those of you who might not venture over to BD. Anyway, it's their cover story and if you're like me and can't wait to get the issue to read the article, then read on:
What Killed Straight Pool?
What Killed Straight Pool?
9 Ball Girl said:This is for those of you who might not venture over to BD. Anyway, it's their cover story and if you're like me and can't wait to get the issue to read the article, then read on:
What Killed Straight Pool?
9 Ball Girl said:This is for those of you who might not venture over to BD. Anyway, it's their cover story and if you're like me and can't wait to get the issue to read the article, then read on:
What Killed Straight Pool?
macguy said:Straight pool by the way was killed by the bar table. It wasn't long before the average player and new players knew nothing but the short rack games and 90% of all pool was being played on bar tables and probably still is. No sinister plot or anything to get rid of the game, just a naturel evolution.
Travis Bickle said:Just try to pick up the ball after a foul and explain ball-in-hand to them, I dare ya! Of course, the rules for 14.1 are pretty simple, but watching two guys pecking away at rack for 10 mins isn't going to stack up real well against the WWE or a tractor pull or the X Games ... for most folks, I guess.
Travis Bickle said:Great story, thanks for posting, 9BG. Yeah, the bar table's got to be a big factor. But another thing in the story that caught my attention was the point made that EVERYBODY knows 9 ball. I don't buy this at all. Everybody, meaning the occasional night-out or barroom shooters, hardly know the rules of the game AT ALL. They know barroom 8 ball, with whatever local goofball rules they play it by where they live.
Just try to pick up the ball after a foul and explain ball-in-hand to them, I dare ya! Of course, the rules for 14.1 are pretty simple, but watching two guys pecking away at rack for 10 mins isn't going to stack up real well against the WWE or a tractor pull or the X Games ... for most folks, I guess.
9 Ball Girl said:This is for those of you who might not venture over to BD. Anyway, it's their cover story and if you're like me and can't wait to get the issue to read the article, then read on:
What Killed Straight Pool?
I agree completely. Most people at bars play 8 ball. Those that play 9 ball are usually wanna be hustlers. And they have no idea what the actual rules are. For example, I can't even count how many times I've had an opponent call "safety" and then barely tap the cb.Travis Bickle said:Great story, thanks for posting, 9BG. Yeah, the bar table's got to be a big factor. But another thing in the story that caught my attention was the point made that EVERYBODY knows 9 ball. I don't buy this at all. Everybody, meaning the occasional night-out or barroom shooters, hardly know the rules of the game AT ALL. They know barroom 8 ball, with whatever local goofball rules they play it by where they live.
Just try to pick up the ball after a foul and explain ball-in-hand to them, I dare ya! Of course, the rules for 14.1 are pretty simple, but watching two guys pecking away at rack for 10 mins isn't going to stack up real well against the WWE or a tractor pull or the X Games ... for most folks, I guess.
9 Ball Girl said:This is for those of you who might not venture over to BD. Anyway, it's their cover story and if you're like me and can't wait to get the issue to read the article, then read on:
What Killed Straight Pool?
sjm said:Wow, that was a fantastic article, and extremely accurate.
I went to the 1983 PPPA straight pool event in which Steve Mizerak beat Jim Fusco in the finals and also view it as the last great straight pool tournament from that era. There was an attempt at reviving the event in Philadelphia in 1986 that didn't work out very well.
The ultimate conclusion of the aticle is that straight pool is tough TV, and even though I've had a lifelong love affair with straight pool, I have to agree. That the safety play is near unwatchable is barely arguable, but even the offesne has its limitations for the typical viewer. It really requires a lot of knowledge to appreciate what a top player is doing as he/she runs the table. Will the crowd jump up and down because a player manufactures a break shot by bumping the three ball a couple of inches? Probably not, and to the untrained eye, straight pool seems like an endless parade of fairly easy shots, with the shooting player's plan being an indecipherable mystery.
Constrastingly, nine ball is simple for the casual fan. If you make the three and leave a nice shot on the four, that's a good shot, and even the most unknowledgeable fan knows it. Nine ball forces some tough shots to be pocketed, and some very tough shape has to be played at times, and great shots are relatively easy to identify for even the most casual fan.
This rates as one of the better articles I've ever seen in BD.
FastMikie said:All those different "reasons" boil down to one thing: MONEY.
There is more money for everyone when playing 9/8 ball. More money for the manufacturers, the bars, the TV networks (and advertisers), the hustlers, the promoters, and the tournament players. Like most things in life, truth, if not happiness, can be found just by following the money. Humans are motivated by either Greed or Fear. Greed killed straight pool. And it's a damn shame!
9 Ball Girl said:This is for those of you who might not venture over to BD. Anyway, it's their cover story and if you're like me and can't wait to get the issue to read the article, then read on:
What Killed Straight Pool?
9 Ball Girl said:But what's stopping Straight Pool from making a comeback? Do you really think it's TV exposure? I ask because 9 Ball is what's always on TV (with the exception of the occasional 7 ball and trick shots) and as someone mentioned in an earlier post, people still don't know the rules and some don't even know the game (if I could count the amount of times someone has approached me and asked "what game is that?" while I'm racking or about to shoot a game of 9 ball...)
I understand how it can be boring to the untrained eye and it will definitely take a longer time to finish than a game of 9 or 7 ball, and it's definitely not as entertaining as a trickshot show. Can you imagine the shots we wouldn't get to see if they shortened a race to 150 to squeeze it into an hour show? Oy! But alas, it is only us that can appreciate the look of ease in the way the balls are pocketed...
The Seigal and Jones 8 ball challenge that's going to be televised in the near future is suppose to increase viewer interest, according to what I've heard. The viewer interest, IMO, is the interest of non pool playing folks who somehow understand 8 ball--"she's got high, he's got low, and the 8 ball goes in last. Ooooh wait, they're playing last pocket 8 ball!"--they actually know this! LOL My interest, on the other hand, is to see Seigal and Jones against one another--be it whatever game.
You know the saying in fashion "everything old is new again". Why not straight pool?
Just another tidbit. I was playing some 14.1 a while ago and I was sitting waiting for my friend to come back from a restroom break. The balls were racked and my breakshot was ready. JoShmo walks by, takes my break shot ball and places it in the rack, looks at me and says, "you need 15 balls in there." I couldn't even get pi$$ed. The poor guy thought he was helping me out. Ay yi yi!
sjm said:Reallocation of economic resources with a motive of producing a greater profit hardly constitutes greed. It is no more than a very natural means of equating supply with demand, and it is the very foundation of a productive economy. Not greed, just adpatation and evolution.