Pool is to Filipinos as Hockey is to Canadians or Football is to Brazillians.
I'd like to say sure it's the heart and desire and the hunger stuff but that's all romantic and overhyped. The truth is, the game over there HAS become part of the culture.
In North America, kids discover pool by accident. They enter in a pool hall in a boring saturday night because they have nothing else to do and they end up failling in love with the game.
In the Philippines, kids don't go to pool halls because it is something to do in a long boring day. They play pool because that's what the older kids do. In the process they play with other kids who they end up gambling with.
In North America, kids play video games for fun. Over there in the Philippines, kids hangout on the streets to play pool.
My point is, over there, they all seem to be naturally talented at the game because they grew up with it. They don't worry about backhand english/pendulum stroke/ etc and everything else that makes the game so artificial. They learn by immitating other players both young, old, good players and bad (I.E Efren)
You can't say the same for pool in N. America. Pool is not part of the North American culture. Instead, people need to be in the Pool Culture to be any good.
I'd like to say sure it's the heart and desire and the hunger stuff but that's all romantic and overhyped. The truth is, the game over there HAS become part of the culture.
In North America, kids discover pool by accident. They enter in a pool hall in a boring saturday night because they have nothing else to do and they end up failling in love with the game.
In the Philippines, kids don't go to pool halls because it is something to do in a long boring day. They play pool because that's what the older kids do. In the process they play with other kids who they end up gambling with.
In North America, kids play video games for fun. Over there in the Philippines, kids hangout on the streets to play pool.
My point is, over there, they all seem to be naturally talented at the game because they grew up with it. They don't worry about backhand english/pendulum stroke/ etc and everything else that makes the game so artificial. They learn by immitating other players both young, old, good players and bad (I.E Efren)
You can't say the same for pool in N. America. Pool is not part of the North American culture. Instead, people need to be in the Pool Culture to be any good.