What seems obvious to me is that Matski, Budhha and Exile have a profound grasp on the realities of UK Paintball with some others having no real idea whatsoever.
We can draw a rough line thru our ballers with the 95th percentile falling into Matski's description of those 'not really bothered enough'.
These are a body of ballers, the main body actually, who run around with a marker in their hand, playing Paintball but not seeing it as a sport.
No disrespect intended toward them or their lack of aspiration but we can't realistically look to them to provide them as any bedrock for our national tournament base.
Their reasons for playing are quite divorced from what we need as tourney ballers tho I do concede a lot of our tourney ballers are form that very group.
These guys basically play for fun and 'good luck to them' is what I say but let's never confuse them with serious ballers.
This leaves a 5% remainder with a fair proportion of them falling into this group so described by Matski :-
Our problem is culture and attitudes, and those are notoriously hard to change unfortunately. We seem to have an issue with getting 'one up' on each other and find reasons to play little league instead of dedicating to something and helping each other out. Our competitive drive seems to be focused on proving something to other teams and raising the middle finger, rather than just winning
Actually I couldn't have put it better myself other than changing the last word (winning) to 'improving' or maybe even 'aspiring to be better'.
We have a small minded culture entirely focused in the wrong place and because of this, we reap the rewards, or in this case we reap the penalties.
When we had 3 teams in the NPPL, we could as Brits, hold our heads up but now, we can't really hold our heads up in Europe let alone the US.
Kelly's certainly have the potential but one swallow don't make a spring, we can't just rely on one team to act as a UK vanguard.
Domestic Leagues don't make great teams, people make great teams; Sergey made the Legion great with his vision and money, he had no domestic league in which to strut his stuff and develop.
The same really goes for Magued and Joy, Joy didn't get good because of any domestic league, bejeeezus, I can't understand why people go down this road.
Joy got great because their players are dedicated enough to train 3 times a week and Magued knew the right road to take them and they listened, and continued listening.
This is why the Swedes are where they are.
'Resources' will now be uttered in the background and it is true, they help but I think you'd be surprised how much Joy get, or don't get.
I know and trust me on this, their improvement isn't down to money, it's down to dedicated players being taught the right things to do.
It's a simple equation with no real complexities.
And so, what are we really left with here?
The acknowledgment that most of us who put on a paintball jersey ain't really that dedicated ....... hmmmmmm...no sh!t ?
And to pile on the sh!t even more....the 5% who are real ballers aren't even focussed correctly.
I think Kelly's are, I think Shock were, going into Campaign because I think I am right in saying, they were training more than any other UK team at that time.
And from these two teams we somehow look to create aspirational focuses for the rest?
I have been around the paintball scene for a long time now and I know what lays in wait ... and it has very little to do with traditional sporting ethics or aspirations, but has everything to do with petty jealousies and chicanery.
What hope have we got?
Short term - none really.
Mid to long term ?
Well, it all depends upon a few things - we need to somehow bring new blood in by marketing tourneyball as against woodsball.
We then have to try and generate a cultural revolution whereby success by one Brit team isn't seen as a reason to decry, slander and conspire against.
The average young male in any nation is competitive by nature, testosterone plays a huge role in this mindset and as such, go take a look at the NXL or NPPL, it is made generally made up of young men, champing at the bit, trying to stick their barrel in yer face and drill you into the ground.
That's what being competitive is, that's what tourney ball is about, that drive, that will to win.
And you can only get to that place by committing yourself.
We need to attract new blood, and lots of it.
And this transfusion can only work if the resources are in place (sites, teams, leagues and coaches) to steer this new influx.