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American Poolplayers Association (APA) was founded by professional
poolplayers Terry Bell and Larry Hubbart in 1979 as the National
Pool League, which became the American Poolplayers Association in
1981. The two realized the popularity of the sport, but knew that,
different from other sports, there was no existing recreational
league system.
Today, the APA, also
known as the Canadian Poolplayers Association in Canada, has grown
to more than 200,000 members and boasts more members than all other
"national" leagues combined. The League is administered
locally by a network of Franchise Operators. League play is conducted
weekly with both 8-Ball and 9-Ball team formats offered.
The APA hosts an 8-Ball
and 9-Ball League system. The APA 8-Ball League and APA 9-Ball League
are offered throughout the country and each year teams have the
opportunity to advance to the APA National Team Championships.
At the national level,
the APA guarantees more than $1 million in national tournament prize
money. This consists of the $500,000 APA 8-Ball National Team Championships,
the $200,000 APA 8-Ball Classic, the $100,000 APA 9-Ball National
Team Championship, the $100,000 APA 9-Ball Shootout, and the MiniMania
tournaments, which paid nearly $150,000 during the 2002 National
Team Championships.
The APA also conducts
the U.S. Amateur Championship, the pool world's most prestigious
amateur tournament, which is the only competition open to APA members
and nonmembers alike. The tournament began in 1994 and has grown
more than 35 percent during the past year, as players across North
America battle for one of the 128 spots in the tournament.
From 1999 to the present,
Entrepreneur Magazine rated the APA No. 1 in the category of Sports-Event
Planning. Entrepreneur Magazine also honored the APA with a No.
53 ranking out of 500 franchising companies in 1998.
One of the keys to the
success of the American Poolplayers Association is The Equalizer®,
the unique handicapping and scoring system that makes it possible
for players of different playing abilities -- especially novices
and beginners -- to compete on an equal basis, much like they do
in golf and bowling. The Equalizer® uses a formula that measures
a player's ability. The result is a handicap of how many games a
player must win to capture a match in 8-Ball or the number of points
a player must earn to win a match in the 9-Ball format.
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