The fact of the matter is that both leagues are woefully flawed. It also seems that where one is strong, the other is weak and vice versa. It's like in 5th grade science when they told you that Africa and South America were actually one continent, then split. You find similarites in both, but at the same time, they lack what the other has.
The NPPL this season has had absolute moments of brilliance. As far as venues go, the beach and two NFL stadiums are hard to beat. The in/out carpet on HB sand played well. The typical Florida sand/rough grass mix at Tampa was just fine. The asphalt at Boston wasn't as bad as I was expecting, but it was still not anything I would have willingly played on. And there WERE injuries-ask the member of A-Team who dislocated his shoulder on Sunday-game stoppage and replay included. Boston was a great venue with a terrible playing surface, a case of sacrificing the heart to keep a pretty face. This is in contrast to PSP fields- all heart, but a face that was beaten with a bag of hot nickels. They have grass, and lots of it (it wasn't even burned and crispy in Chicago this year). PSP venues, almost without exception are not only off the beaten path, but aren't even located in recognizable places or near known landmarks! It lends quite a bit more credibility to the sport as a whole when the Chicago Open is in CHICAGO, not Bolingbrook. Everyone can find the NFL stadium in town, if they are a local or a visitor. Few can, off the top of their head, find the BRAC, or the BLAST or whatever acronym in nowhere the PSP is.
The PSP is gaining ground every day in organization and presentation. They are becoming a better league. The NPPL is maintaining and gaining on the precedent set at Huntington Beach 2003.The problem above problems is that both leagues are good, neither is great. This problem is due to factions, egos, and small picture thinking on the part of the few people who actually run the leagues, and for all intents and purposes, paintball. There is blood on all their hands, Billy, Adam, Dave, Jerry, Chuck, Ged, etc. Each has a conflicting interest in paintball league operation/promotion and business.
Reunification benefits the players, the teams, the sponsors, the vendors, TV, and the overall health and growth of the industry. It does not benefit the short sighted plans in each industry leader's mind, no matter how well intended that person believes those plans are.