July 13, 2010 - Durham Herald Sun - 44th Annual American Pool National Tournament - "Pool checkers club members look to share 'thinking game' with younger players" link
Pool checkers club members look to share 'thinking game' with younger players
By Neil Offen
noffen@heraldsun.com; 419-6646
DURHAM -- The vast majority of the players at the 44th annual American Pool
Checker Association National Tournament at the Four Points by Sheraton Hotel
were in their 50s, 60s and beyond.
Many of the men -- they were mostly men -- playing Wednesday wore hats,
including some white banded fedoras, giving the hotel ballroom the feel of a
1940s movie.
"I'm 56, and I'm just about the youngest person here," said Tim Moore, the
president of the host Bull City Pool Checkers Club.
He doesn't want to be.
The club, which meets on the first Saturday of every month at the Imperial
Barbershop on Fayetteville Street, wants to get more young people involved in
pool checkers, a more intense, creative game than what its adherents call
straight checkers. It had brought half a dozen local kids, ranging from 7- and
8-year-olds to teenagers, to the tournament, so they could learn the game, play
it and absorb the family-like atmosphere generated by the top masters and others
who were competing.
"We've got to get the young people involved," said Moore, right after defeating
Larry Lindsay of Newberry, S.C., in an intense master's level game. "We want to
train the kids, let them know what a great game this is."
The club, which has about 20 or 30 active local members, hopes to find a
permanent, dedicated clubhouse, where it can bring young people to explain the
intricacies of the game. In the meantime, the club -- which incorporated a
little more than two years as a nonprofit organization -- launched a training
program back in January at the Salvation Army Boys and Girls club.
A dozen or more kids take part in the weekly sessions and the club has installed
a Web-based pool checker game on the boys and girls club's computers.
Wayne Lockhart, the tournament director, admitted, however, that it's an uphill
battle to interest young people in what may seem like an old-fashioned game.
"We're certainly trying to promote the game to young people," he said. "But the
reality is that the young people prefer Pac-Man and all those video games. This
is a thinking game."
"The kids do love computer games," Moore acknowledged. "But we have ways they
can play online now, against people anywhere in the country, and we think once
they try it, they're really going to like it."
And if the club can get the kids involved, "then we can get their parents, too,"
Moore said.
If you're interested in learning or playing the game -- or if your kids are --
you can call Moore at 602-1004 or visit the national association's website at
www.americanpoolcheckers.us.
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The Herald-Sun - Pool checker club members look to share thinking game with
younger players