shapenaji wrote:For pro's go is NOT just "a game to play with friends", that's WHY they're pros, this is their livelihood. Pros may have played this game "just to play", but once they started studying it full-time, it became something more, and you need to respect their commitment to excellence. Asking them to teach and review is polite. Offering them incentives to do so is also polite.
Their 'incentive' is that they get to represent North America in overseas tournaments. They get expenses paid travel, accommodations and game fees for losing to a world class pro.
I find it insulting that we somehow have offer them incentives though. I'm a professional scientist, and when I deployed those professional skills to rebuild the AGA's rating system I did it for free. Should I have billed for my time spent on the project because I was using professional scientific skills? Perhaps we should be paying computer professionals when they do work on the AGA's web system as well?
Go in North America is in its infancy, and everyone, pros included should expect to put in some time for free. Pros certainly benefit from everyone's work--they get more potential paying students as the go community expands--and there's no reason they shouldn't be expected to put in a few hours of service.