I think if you play in the APA and your top priority is something other than to have fun then you're probably in the wrong organization. I love to play and I'd rather win than lose, but I play in the APA specifically because it's not a money league. I have found that the moment money gets put into the conversation the bastard quotient goes up about 1000 points, friendships go out the window and money changes the game completely. Some people are excellent money players, and some people see money and they lose their minds. I've been in the APA since it was the Busch league and I have never played in the National Tournament. Years ago when I was a win at all costs guy I was a premium sandbagger but trying to beat the system just takes too much work and thought. For those of you that think they know the APA formula I'd really like to know your resource. I'd like to think that I know it, I have written documentation to that effect and a very reliable source but it's huge pain in the ass to keep track of and in the end I could be wrong anyhow. If you feel like you need to lose a match to keep your S/L down play a player that's better than you are but play your best and normal game, but don't expect to change your S/L in one or two matches. The system isn't fair to everyone, I've played people from other parts of the country that were the same S/L as me that were so much better it was hard to believe, and some that were so bad that was also hard to believe. Sure the APA has it's issues, but it's what we have. I think if you're as serious as justadub seems to be then maybe you want to play in an organization other than the APA. As far as what skill level you are, play by yourself for a while, play honestly, play 8 ball. Break your rack and play against yourself like you'd play in a real match, if you're finishing your game in a typical 3 - 4 innings, you're probably about an S/L 4 -5, more than 6 innings you're likely an S/L 3ish, if you're breaking and running about 2 of every three or 4 racks it's safe to say you're a 6-7, your 9 ball S/L is typically an S/L higher than your 8, this isn't always true, but it's sort of a rule of thumb. Of course more goes into it that just that but that should give you some idea. But try to have fun, ignore the innings and the assholes, try to win, and hopefully you'll be playing with people that have something in their lives besides pool, that can grow old awful fast.