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Emerald Ball
Posted by Anon 3
9/3/2006  3:33:00 AM
Did i read that correctly that there were 9.400 entries for the competition last weekend.
Re: Emerald Ball
Posted by Laura
9/3/2006  7:59:00 PM
Emerald Ball? That was back in May. It was very big, I'd definitely believe that number.
Embassy Ball
Posted by Jonathan
9/3/2006  9:43:00 PM
Anon3 was probably talking about Embassy Ball, which just took place this past weekend. 9,400 sounds accurate, if you consider that every single pro-am dance counts as an entry.
Re: Embassy Ball
Posted by Anon 3
9/3/2006  10:04:00 PM
Jonathan. I did take that each event might have been called an entry. Even if each contestant entered ten events that is still a hugh amount of people dancing. How on earth did they get through the program.
Re: Embassy Ball
Posted by Laura
9/4/2006  7:57:00 AM
Embassy started on Wednesday and ended on Sunday, so that's one way they got through all the entries.
Re: Embassy Ball
Posted by Anon 3
9/6/2006  5:58:00 AM
Laura. I beleve there was a professional competition this last weekend at the Embassy Ball. Brian Watson was first, Slavik was second. Isn't good to see that Slavik is back in action once again.
Re: Embassy Ball
Posted by Administrator
9/9/2006  10:49:00 PM
The pro-am divisions are where the entries really add up quickly.

A very active pro-am student may put in as many as 50 or 75 entries in a single competition. Top Pro-am teachers might have 8 students or more. Contenders for the top teacher prize will usually need a minimum of 300 entries just to get in the running (and some have many more). If you have 5 or 6 teachers competing for that spot, that's at least a couple thousand entries. And don't forget the other 30 or 40 teachers with fewer entries, and it all adds up to several thousand. Now add all the professional and amateur entries, and you can see how 9,400 is a large but perfectly realistic number.

How does a single student get so many entries? Consider the following example:

Jenny is a 35 year-old pro-am student who competes at the silver level in all 4 dance styles (standard, Latin, smooth & rhythm). In each style, she can compete in her level, one level up, and one age division down. In other words, if she's a "full silver lady A2", she can compete in full silver and beginning gold, and in the ladys A1 and A2 age divisions. Every single dance therefore gives her the opportunity to participate in 4 entries.

Standard and Latin each have 5 dances, smooth has 4, and rhythm has about 15 (dependingon the competition). So in the single dance divisions alone, she can enter 29 dances times four, or 116 entries total. And this is just closed single-dance entries. Add open single-dance entries, scholarships, championships, and it's feasible that one student could have as many as 200 pro-am entries.

Of course, no student in his right mind does this, but it illustrates the possibilities. I've heard of top student competitors with over a hundred. It must be a lot of work. 10 years ago I won the top teacher prize at the California Star Ball with a measley 75 entries, and it nearly killed me. I have no idea how the big players with hundreds of entries do it.

Regards,
Jonathan
Re: Embassy Ball
Posted by Anonymous
9/6/2006  7:01:00 AM
The results were not posted on their website embassyball.com.

The total pro prize money was $112,000
and the winner of std or latin pro dancing was only $1500.

Compare this to the millions of dollars other sports--golf, tennis, football and so on.

How can the pros even surrive without a sponsor? High level lessons, travel and event expenses probabaly have most pros living on a very tight budget.
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