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This is called "testing the waters". A complete split away from the PDGA has been in the cards for a long while. It only makes sense, the PDGA is clearly more aligned with a USGA amateur org vs a PGA pro org.
Smaller baskets, lower cost.I've always wondered what would be improved by splitting up. Different rule book? Different equipment? Less money?
I've always wondered what would be improved by splitting up. Different rule book? Different equipment? Less money?
Eliminate the PDGA tech requirements. If I were a major disc brand I would absolutely start my own tour and only allow my discs to be used on that tour. It would significantly cut down your talent base in the first year but if your payouts were the best in town everyone would flock to your banner. A well planned and executed brand sponsored tour could effectively win 90% of the disc sales in one fell swoop.
Eliminate the PDGA tech requirements. If I were a major disc brand I would absolutely start my own tour and only allow my discs to be used on that tour. It would significantly cut down your talent base in the first year but if your payouts were the best in town everyone would flock to your banner. A well planned and executed brand sponsored tour could effectively win 90% of the disc sales in one fell swoop.
Next you'll be suggesting Hooter girls and ESPN3 coverage.
Eliminate the PDGA tech requirements. If I were a major disc brand I would absolutely start my own tour and only allow my discs to be used on that tour. It would significantly cut down your talent base in the first year but if your payouts were the best in town everyone would flock to your banner. A well planned and executed brand sponsored tour could effectively win 90% of the disc sales in one fell swoop.
Logic...you just had to go there didn't you!And there's also nothing stopping a company from doing that right now, except logic.
[Goes and checks my rating]
PDGA website: 895
I have to say I agree with Paul.
Eliminate the PDGA tech requirements. If I were a major disc brand I would absolutely start my own tour and only allow my discs to be used on that tour. It would significantly cut down your talent base in the first year but if your payouts were the best in town everyone would flock to your banner. A well planned and executed brand sponsored tour could effectively win 90% of the disc sales in one fell swoop.
In one fell swoosh?
If an actually big company decided to get behind disc golf and throw tens of millions of dollars at engineering, production, and tournaments, they could dominate. If some company swooshes in and starts hosting tournaments with a couple million dollars of added cash for each tournament, their own rulebook, and their own standards, they could take over the world of disc golf and drive the rest of us out of business. Or at the very least completely own the professional scene.
It's possible, but who's gonna do it? Do they want to reinvent the wheel or do they just want to make some discs and host some tournaments within the existing framework?
Who's gonna do it? It'd have to be someone who doesn't expect to get those millions back. I'm inclined to think that anyone smart enough to have that much cash, will be someone smart enough to not throw it away.
For any successful sport where does the money come from? Fans. Ams. Etc. Want bigger better DG NOW? Want green fees?
Investing in "up and coming" sports or outside mainstream is a great way to go broke.
For any successful sport where does the money come from? Fans. Ams. Etc. Want bigger better DG NOW? Want green fees?
Organic growth = good. Commercialization = bad $$$
There are a lot of spoiled disc golfers out there that demand free rounds - some of us out here have to pay to play our courses, and honestly it's not a big deal and it certainly isn't prohibitive considering what we get out of it.
"oh wait that's right because they are pointless!"
He's right. The PDGA should be for ams only. The pros need much better overall representation to the public than what the PDGA provides.
"oh wait that's right because they are pointless!"
He's right. The PDGA should be for ams only. The pros need much better overall representation to the public than what the PDGA provides.