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How
and Why did the Hunter Tour get started?
Well, the Hunter
Tour was started by Susan Dasher, because in the summer of 1993, several
articles in billiard magazines were questioning why there was such an uneven
participation of women in tournaments across Texas. Susan wrote the following
article in response to why there was so little women in tournaments. Little
did she know that speaking out for women pool players in this article,
set her mind a racing and set out her reasons for starting the Hunter Tour.
From August 1993, quoting
Susan Dasher in the American Cueist:
"Call it emotion,
call it anger, call it just and attitude; but whatever characterization
you use, there is a new cohesiveness and aggressiveness among the women
playing pool in Texas. The phenomena may be occurring elsewhere, but this
writer's information base does not yet stretch much beyond the Southwest.
Responses to the request in last month's column for an explanation of the
. uneven participation of women in tournaments indicated that the catalyst
for the unrest is gender based discrimination. The inequality generally
takes the form of unequal money and patronizing attitudes from tournament
directors. In Texas, unless a woman owner of woman sponsor intervenes,
the woman can expect to receive little attention, much less money added
and an extremely cavalier back-of-the-hand approach to tournament direction.
Matches are not announced, women players are the butt of snide remarks
and questions are met with eyes rolled back and snickers. Not always, but
too often.
The most recent
event in Austin, TX, the 20th Annual Texas State 9-Ball Open, give testimony
to the difference a woman makes. Room co-owner and manger Lynn Aderhold
actively promoted the women's side of the event, the 32 field filled and
$1000 was added to the women's event instead of the usual $500. Another
jewel in this awakening is the $3,500 added San Antonio Rose being held
in October at Galaxy Billiards, NE in San Antonio. Thanks for this all-womens
event goes to Susan Dasher, Julie Hilliker and that great lover of women
pool payers, room owner Don Hoppe.
In Texas, these
events, and the Women's' Amateur Eightball Championship, stand alone. The
indifferent or very different treatment accorded the women in the McDermott
tour has the predictable result of diminished participation, bitterness
and bad feelings all the way around. Neither the Texas State Nine Ball
Open or the San Antonio Rose will be a part of the next McDermott tour.
They will be locally directed and promoted directly by the room owner and
the sponsors. There will be a return to hands-on management to assure equality
if treatment.
The return to
networking among the women pool players as a means of promoting participation,
the lowering of entry fees and the focusing on four major events, three
of which are women only, is the positive result of the growing dissatisfaction.
In many ways this reaction parallels the actions taken by the professional
women who split from the men's tour. Since the creation of the separate
"Classic Tour" the WPBA has flourished. The most recent statistics on money
eared by the men and women's professionals finds more women then men in
the top ten money winners. It is a trend worth watching."
January 1994
Headline:
"Wes Hunter,
cuemaker and room owner of Alamagordo, NM, has teamed up with Texas attorney
Susan Dasher to start an amateur women's tour for the Southwest. The tour
is determined to keep entry fees low and pay offs high, with the avowed
goal of increasing participation among the amateurs. See next article for
more details!" |
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