hailthorn011 wrote:HermanHiddema wrote:What would a professional system provide that is not currently available?
You could use that logic for any professional system. Like, NFL, NBA (ha ha), NHL, ect.
A professional event usually generates more excitement than an amateur event.
Are you going to watch Manchester United play Liverpool or Virginia Somethings battle the North Carolina Fuzzballs? Just an example.
Or you could look to Japan's Go scene which is dominated by news about Professional Go players.
I think the term "professional" creates excitement. Now, whether the USA is ripe for such a system at the moment is another debate. I won't argue with the fact that maybe we should put more emphasis on expanding the player base before trying to establish a "pro league" that could be doomed to fail due to the lack of a market for such a thing, but I think ultimately, having a professional system would be a major boost for Go in the USA.
Most professional systems come about naturally, because there is enough money available to support professional players.
Suppose the AGA decided to start a pro system, and decided that from now on, all players 6 dan or stronger receive some professional rank (say 2 pro ranks per amateur rating point or something like that). Would it add any value to the US Open, that those players now have 1p, 2p, 6p or 9p behind their name instead of 6d, 7d or 8d? They are the same players, the level of play did not improve at all, and there is no money to actually pay them anything. Such "pro" ranks are completely empty.
Creating a pro system just because you like the sound of the word "professional" is Cargo Cult thinking.