Hi dino,
I wish every event was played on Diamond Pro's or Gabriels Vector tables. Instead we get second class equipment. Why? Other than the dollars issue, the spectators like to see the players make balls. If every televised event was on even 4 1/2" pockets, the number of misses (jars) would go up dramaticly. Thats not good for TV either!
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I disagree, snooker is popular and the pockets are difficlut in that game. Tight pockets adds drama to every shot, because it's very possible for a player to miss. And drama, let's not forget, is why everyone watches sports in the first place.
You say the spectators like to see the players make balls. I submit that I'm hearing a lot of people on this board agree that the pockets were too big and the tables too easy. Since they were all 'spectators' I would say you're wrong.
I'll tell all of you what makes me sick. In the pool world, you always hear this type of comment - "Sure Mike Davis beat Earl in the tournament, but there's no way he would beat him gambling." To me that comment alone is what makes pool (nine-ball especially) a second rate sport.
The tournament game should be HARDER to win than the poolroom game, not easier. Look at tennis, they play best-of-five sets in major tournaments (try doing that sometime, see if you can make it to set four without having a heart attack). In golf, they play FOUR ROUNDS on a tough course (in the old days, the final round of the US Open was 36 holes). When they gamble at those sports (and they do, believe me), it's never in matches that long. Thus someone might say, "sure I beat Andre Agassi in a set and won $5000, but there's no way I could beat him over five sets at the US Open or Wimbledon." Now THAT'S what I would like to hear in pool.
Both golf and tennis players are prepared to go out and play for FIVE HOURS at any given time to win their money yet in pool a 45 minute race-to-seven is considered acceptable. Give me a break.
Until the TV game is the same as the poolroom game, real legitimacy will always be missing from tournaments. Guys match up and play for their OWN money and they always play 'ahead' sets (or mostly anyways). The day will probably never come where they play a tournament that features all 'ahead' sets, but in my opinion that would be the greatest thing ever. How would you like that - the finals of the US Open as a 15 ahead set of ten-ball (winner breaks). Now we're talking pool.
Currently, major tournaments are competed and telecast as nothing more than quck exhibitions, and it makes me sick.