Re: Sad Commentary
Hi Danny,
It's difficult to see what's happened to the sport of inline hockey and avoid becoming a nay-sayer, or being accused of only looking at the dark side. However, it seems that a very few people are making big money on the sport, and giving very little back, and it's hard not to get bummed out. I'm not going to point any fingers, and I don't want anyone else to follow this post up by pointing fingers. But I can clearly remember how huge house leagues were -- and how quickly they died when the focus turned toward the elite players and ignored the house-league inline hockey players.
A microcosm of that problem is the beach scene in Santa Monica, which once was HUGE. There would be five or six different games going on at once on weekends. Bit by bit, however, the best players took over the "A" court, only picked their best buddies for their team, and then held on to the court for hours at a time. If they lost, they might sit out for a game, while the second group of elite players beat the crap out of a thrown-together team... and then the first team would be right back on the court. After a while, participation dropped off, because it was the same damn guys playing against each other all the time. How was an average player supposed to get better if he couldn't play against the best?
So, a few ruined it for the rest.
Solution? Well, you can't turn back the clock. I don't think that inline hockey summit a while back changed anything. You were there. Do you?
Sincerely,
Richard Graham
Editor
Inline Hockey Central
Sincerely,
Richard Graham
Editor
Inline Hockey Central
Bookmarks