Ahh, refreshing to see some of the old shots on a real foosball table(s) The 1/4 Million, Million Dollar versions. As a player in the mid 70's these tables allowed the aspiring player to perfect a wide variety of very fast lethal shots that would leave the spectator scratching his head on how you did it. These day's need to come back.
Foosball has evolved since then. The most consistent and dominant techniques will always be the most used ones at the higher levels.
I have read on other threads that people want the "snake shot" eliminated from competitions.
Honestly, this is a vocal minority vs a silent majority. The majority of competitive players are fine with the snake shot, it's only old school players (who, quite frankly, wouldn't play tournament anymore regardless of the rules) who seem to have a problem with it. Case in point: Warrior didn't allow snake shots in open events, and look at their turnouts.
My take on that , since the "snake" is nothing new is that it should be regulated as per how many times it can be employed per game. A player needs to have a pre-qualification session before he/she can enter a competition and can demonstrate that they have a variety of at least 10 lethal shots that they can execute and variations there of.
This is a strange argument. Do high jumpers need to demonstrate other techniques than the Falsbury Flop? Did Shaq need to demonstrate 3-point skills in the NBA? Enforcing variety in shots means you're limiting the potential of your opponents, not increasing it. Why limit what a competitor can do? That's not going to show who the best player is.
I think it is very unfair to the players who have this knowledge of how to do a lethal push-pull reverse, front pin squeeze, one motion long push tap, banks at will, straight up push-pull reverse, slice taps, reverse tap and all the variations are endless. This is skilled play if you can master it much less defend against it.
I think it's unfair to limit someone who has a refined shot to how many time they may shoot it. Most people who have a variety of shots obtained them because they don't have a killer primary. Nothing is preventing anyone from employing a variety of shots, so clearly the tournament outcome shows that it simply isn't worthwhile to do.
If it took such skill to defend against these shots, why aren't more people shooting them? Variations are nice and all, but they're gimmick shots. Half the time they're raceable, and the other half they're inconsistent.
Anybody can develop a good five man pass, pin the ball and do a variety of pin snake shots and win tournaments, but with only that in their pocket of skills they are very limited to that only and that level of play which minimizes both the skill level and the game itself level.
You must be joking here... The majority of old school players have terrible 5 bars. It takes a REALLY long time to develop a good 5 series. Honestly, if it were so easy to do, why is it that the same players are always at the top in tournaments? I mean, supposedly anyone can develop a good 5 series, and the snake is so freakin easy, that means we should have a huge variety in who wins, right?
We need to up the skill and requirements that at least 10 different shots need to be executed. Not only will that give the game more old school players vs. the young guns, it will make it more exciting and your defense will never know what you are about to do or where it went.
While we're at it, let's change hockey so that the same player can never score twice in one game... Or let's make soccer so that you can never kick with the same foot twice in a row...
I have watched a varity of tourneys on youtube and its always the same thing. Skilled passing from five man to three man and then the front pin and then the snake shot, Boring, Really this is skilled play. Maybe skilled at 1 shot obviously.
Look, I agree that it looks boring. But it is the highest calibre of play. Hell, even in the late 70s everyone at the highest level was only shooting pull shots, and you would see the occasional pushkick. How is that any different than majority snakeshots with the occasional pull? Tournaments aren't there to entertain you, they exist to show who the best is.
Then we need to approach the table issues. Alot of old timers who actually have 20-30 lethal shots or variations there of find that it is impossible to accomplish these shots on different tables. I know, I have a Tornado with hollow bars and you are limited to the shots you can preform vs. a Million Dollar table. I think this is one reason for the decline in interest. Old timers want to employ all their skills and are limited by hard men, hard to control balls, hollow bars etc. Not that Tornado's are not good tables but they promote a certain limited style of play.
Tornado isn't more limited, it's more consistent. The ball always rolls true, so you can have a much more consistent delivery in everything that you do. TS? It was a constant battle to control the ball at all... The consistencies of the table varied from table to table, so you never knew what you were going to get.
And 20-30 lethal shots? More like 20-30 absolutely mediocre shots, and throw in a good pull, maybe a pushkick, and maybe a backpin. But mostly pulls.
Sure, maybe you personally can execute some of these 'lethal shots' on TS better than Tornado... But they probably all have a tell to them, some slight hitch, or setup routine, that lets a goalie what you're going to do. The reason tournament players develop an unraceable pull or snake is that a) it's the most consistent, and b) There are no tells to which hole you're shooting at. Yes, even on TS.
Also, foosball was in decline even while the TS table was used as the tournament standard. The kicker? Video games. It's even more so now that games are online.
I hear this type of discussion a lot, but I can guarantee a few things: Bring back the TS brown top, and snake shots will still win top prize. Bring back TS and the players who are winning now will still win. Enforce a variety of shots, and the players who are winning now will still win. Don't believe me? Look at Leonhart tournaments; That table is the extension of the TS Brown Top.
The game is in the state it's in now simply because that's what wins using the current rules.
P.s.: I shoot a variety of shots, from tic-tacs, pulls, euro pins, pushkicks, but no snake... I even have 3 5 bar series' that I mix while playing... I simply disagree with the premise of your post.
I also play on a wide variety of tables: Warrior, Tornado, Fireball, Garlando, Bonzini, and have played on a lot of the old school tables at length (TS blue and green top, Dynamo Browntop, Deutscher Meister etc).