drivermaker
Banned
In the June issue of Billiards Digest, George Fels wrote an article about some of the pros from the past that met either untimely and unfortunate deaths, but also who shared a common denominator which was the monster unhappiness that pool created. He also suggested for any young man who was thinking about turning pro to "Run, don't walk away".
As much as we all like hearing war stories from the past of all the great fun times and conquests by our favorite "heroes" as if they were legendary gunslingers, and retelling those stories over and over, there's a world of reality out there which says...you will get old...your skills, eyes, and nerves will diminish...but life goes on and in today's economy it costs a shitload to live and exist.
I've personally been doing quite a bit of planning over the last couple of years regarding the time I was going to say "F*#K IT" to work and just play for the rest of my life. I'm going to do it next year when a new house gets built in another state, but working the numbers for living expenses, cost of living increases, potential emergencies, and even the possibility of assisted living or nursing home costs a number or years down the road is quite sobering.
The most important question is...where is all the money going to come from to pay for all of that when no more is coming in from work earnings?
Fortunately I know where it's coming from and how much...but what do you think it's going to be like for the majority of older pros that are now getting to the point in life when they'll be making that decision?
Hell, Social Security doesn't pay shit...even if you contributed the maximum amount every single year that you were eligible from adulthood. The maximum amount ANYONE could possibly make in the country is $1900 a month. Most in the world of pool would probably fall WELL under $1000 a month due to the fact that earnings (gambling) weren't reported, or after write-offs from tournament expenses they zeroed out in income and a minimum was sent in for SS contributions.
How many pool players in their YOUNG lives had the foresight to invest in real estate, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, or anything to build a nest egg for the future? My guess is, whenever extra money was available, it was used as a nest egg for future gambling escapades. To anyone's knowledge, has there ever been any pool players that got filthy rich from gambling and ended up walking away from it all? I know of some that are still working other jobs outside of pool, but NO ONE that's really living comfortably or high off the hog.
Marrying into a little wealth might help, but a number of them aren't.
There are only a handfull of pros that I see who might live life decently in their greying years. Alan Hopkins could probably do what he's doing until 90 if he had the energy and he would come out pretty damn good. Jeanette Lee is the smartest of all and parlays it into everything that makes good business sense.
A few of them get into cue making or open rooms, but who really knows how successful ventures like that are?
All I can say is...when you start crunching numbers...it's pretty scary. There's no better time to start saving than the present when you're young enough, and I mean A LOT!
Typically we all stick our heads in the sand like an Ostrich and don't discuss this about our legendary heros, but anybody else with some thoughts one way or another?
As much as we all like hearing war stories from the past of all the great fun times and conquests by our favorite "heroes" as if they were legendary gunslingers, and retelling those stories over and over, there's a world of reality out there which says...you will get old...your skills, eyes, and nerves will diminish...but life goes on and in today's economy it costs a shitload to live and exist.
I've personally been doing quite a bit of planning over the last couple of years regarding the time I was going to say "F*#K IT" to work and just play for the rest of my life. I'm going to do it next year when a new house gets built in another state, but working the numbers for living expenses, cost of living increases, potential emergencies, and even the possibility of assisted living or nursing home costs a number or years down the road is quite sobering.
The most important question is...where is all the money going to come from to pay for all of that when no more is coming in from work earnings?
Fortunately I know where it's coming from and how much...but what do you think it's going to be like for the majority of older pros that are now getting to the point in life when they'll be making that decision?
Hell, Social Security doesn't pay shit...even if you contributed the maximum amount every single year that you were eligible from adulthood. The maximum amount ANYONE could possibly make in the country is $1900 a month. Most in the world of pool would probably fall WELL under $1000 a month due to the fact that earnings (gambling) weren't reported, or after write-offs from tournament expenses they zeroed out in income and a minimum was sent in for SS contributions.
How many pool players in their YOUNG lives had the foresight to invest in real estate, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, or anything to build a nest egg for the future? My guess is, whenever extra money was available, it was used as a nest egg for future gambling escapades. To anyone's knowledge, has there ever been any pool players that got filthy rich from gambling and ended up walking away from it all? I know of some that are still working other jobs outside of pool, but NO ONE that's really living comfortably or high off the hog.
Marrying into a little wealth might help, but a number of them aren't.
There are only a handfull of pros that I see who might live life decently in their greying years. Alan Hopkins could probably do what he's doing until 90 if he had the energy and he would come out pretty damn good. Jeanette Lee is the smartest of all and parlays it into everything that makes good business sense.
A few of them get into cue making or open rooms, but who really knows how successful ventures like that are?
All I can say is...when you start crunching numbers...it's pretty scary. There's no better time to start saving than the present when you're young enough, and I mean A LOT!
Typically we all stick our heads in the sand like an Ostrich and don't discuss this about our legendary heros, but anybody else with some thoughts one way or another?