I have no issue with your opinion other than the way you choose to share it. You bitch about all the things you don't like but offer no solutions.
You have no time to separate the good from the bad?
Sigh. This is part of the problem. Anybody who's shot a few matches this year thinks they know what all the issues are and how to solve them.
Frank's been putting on these matches for our amusement since before this sport was even on your radar.
He was around before PRS started and he'll be around after it's long gone.
You're looking at a single conversation in going on 8ish years of this series and the nonsense that's come up.
He's offered solutions to problems you've never heard about but "they" never fix them.
Why do you think the NRL exists? He's not alone. A whole group broke off and started anew to attempt to execute a better series.
It's not without it's faults, but I do think they've learned from some of the PRS' errors.
Either way, you're like a kid wandering into the middle of an adult conversation and throwing your opinion around like you know something about what's going on. You don't.
Been to several of his matches and they're among the best I've attended. Bumped into him in person a number of times and he's a personable guy, friendly.
You're off base. The end.
As for this little exercise in big money hyping a match, we'll see what the finished product looks like. The fact that there's any number of accomplished guys who weren't invited just highlights the bias people are talking about.
Is it really the biggest match ever with all the best shooters in the country if all the best shooters weren't there?
I think the best thing it's "done" for the sport is the $1000 fee. Charge anybody who wants to compete as a 'Pro' $1000 fee for every match they enter. Split up the $1000 fees multiplied by number of 'Pros' and that's the money pool for the top 3 or top 5 or top 10, whatever.
Prize table would be reserved for the non 'Pros' where the sponsors wouldn't see all their shit up for sale the following Monday and might in term earn some brand loyalty because the guy that got the bag will actually use it.
I promise you this, slap a $1000 fee on entering as a 'Pro' and you'll see a lot less people talking about how accomplished they are as shooters. Now you're out a G if you enter and flop.
It also eliminates the prize table bullshit. If you make the classes based on performance and compulsory rather than optional you eliminate sand bagging.
These problems aren't new and there's been plenty of suggestions over the years, not many have been utilized.
All he's asking is the same question I have, apart from the fee and payout for the what, top 5? How's this different than any other PRS match?
Supposedly the video and how it was executed will generate interest and grow the sport. We'll see. I've been around long enough to have heard that before. Not much has changed. I hope this is the catalyst for change we're all waiting for.