snarzberry
Registered
These threads I've read about professional pool players struggling makes me wonder, if the money in pro pool is spread so thin, why don't the top players try to make a dent in the snooker world?
I've seen the 14.1 world championships being happy, rightly so, about a US$70,000 total prize fund. The 9 ball world champion can expect to take home about US$40,000.
The 2011 World Snooker Championships prize fund was just shy of US$2,000,000 with over $400,000 to the winner. There are also numerous other tournaments each year with total prize funds in the US$500,000 - $1,000,000 range.
I love pool. I love playing pool and I love watching the top players in action. They are so gifted with cue in hand it just makes me wonder why they don't just gravitate towards where the money is.
Snooker also provides massive t.v. audiences and sponsorship money (the Chinese market contributes heavily). I've read that Ding Junhui, China's top snooker player, is the 3rd most famous person in all of China and over 140 million people watched a recent world championship semi-final match he was involved in live. It was the second most watched live sporting event in all of China for the year to date.
I'm sure this has been brought up many times before but I'd really appreciate any insight that those in the know about the US pool scene in particular can offer. Is snooker just not even on their radar? It seems like too much money to pass up on.
It would take practice and dedication to make the transition between cue sports sure, but would you put it past the likes of the US's top pool players to be able to succeed in that discipline?
I've seen the 14.1 world championships being happy, rightly so, about a US$70,000 total prize fund. The 9 ball world champion can expect to take home about US$40,000.
The 2011 World Snooker Championships prize fund was just shy of US$2,000,000 with over $400,000 to the winner. There are also numerous other tournaments each year with total prize funds in the US$500,000 - $1,000,000 range.
I love pool. I love playing pool and I love watching the top players in action. They are so gifted with cue in hand it just makes me wonder why they don't just gravitate towards where the money is.
Snooker also provides massive t.v. audiences and sponsorship money (the Chinese market contributes heavily). I've read that Ding Junhui, China's top snooker player, is the 3rd most famous person in all of China and over 140 million people watched a recent world championship semi-final match he was involved in live. It was the second most watched live sporting event in all of China for the year to date.
I'm sure this has been brought up many times before but I'd really appreciate any insight that those in the know about the US pool scene in particular can offer. Is snooker just not even on their radar? It seems like too much money to pass up on.
It would take practice and dedication to make the transition between cue sports sure, but would you put it past the likes of the US's top pool players to be able to succeed in that discipline?