kitanifan wrote:I too think it is a waste of money to establish an organization that would be inferior to East from the very beginning. We don't have enough good players, and even if europe had 3 Dinerchteins, it wouldn't be enough…
HermanHiddema wrote:I still don't see the added value in calling them professionals. If they are not strong enough to really compete with Asian pros...
HermanHiddema wrote:...Simply said, I think that it is a bad idea to call players "professionals" if they are weak players...
I’m not saying it was the entire argument given. I’m only saying it shouldn’t be a reason for not wanting a pro organization since there will almost never be hobbyists good enough to compete against players that play Go full time. The pro organization is what give the opportunity to play Go full time so then they have a chance of competing.
Now for the subject of pro organization over teaching. Yes I think a pro organization would work better, maybe not in the short term but the long term. Teaching new players and school programs might make 5 or 10 new players at a time or in the lucky case more but if you create a pro organization the overall knowledge of Go in the west will raise. Just think of your favorite sport. Did you first learn about the sport because you went to a workshop on it or they taught it to you in school? A pro organization will allow for publicity every time one of the pros competes in a major tournament or an important game happens. It’s the difference between teaching clusters of people how to play Go, and sending a net over the entire country to just letting them know that Go exists and let them figure out the rules on their own. Even if only a small percentage of people hear about Go through the publicity it far exceeds the number of people that can be taught through workshops.