Apologies for singling you out. Guess you're just the most active recently and have seen your comments contain both fargo rate and ability to put racks together.You must be a very good, well rounded player JV. I’m not the one who stated this first. Kentucky said pretty much there was no way at 480 listed fargorate I could run an 18% B&R rate on avg in the tournaments I play. And if so he won’t take my word on it and I’d have to prove it. It doesn’t have anything to do with fargorate. But the general consensus is that in order to be a certain level you would need a certain level of offense to achieve said level.
Also I’d say i don’t think a 600 could beat the ghost 7-0. Unlike Kentucky I wouldn’t need proof. But there he is at 600 beating down the ghost 7-0. That’s like 700+ level offense. He didn’t miss a shot so there is no way to compute the actual level of his offensive play without any misses. But if an avg 650’s offense is even with the ghost, even that 650 will have a rough time 7-0ing the ghost.
This is why the ghost is rated at 650. It takes the avg offensive play of a 650 to play even with the ghost.
Dr Dave has even addressed break and runs as a sign of fargorate level. I think a 500 was 5-10% or maybe a 600 was 10%. This is off memory. A 600 has probably run a 3 pack at least once and a 700 a 6 pack. It’s just an estimate of avg offense of each tier of player is all.
I consider myself a strong "club player". Not special but one of those guys that make locals say "oh shit" when they see my name in their part of the bracket....lol. I have developed more of a well rounded game over the last few years and have been known to grind out sets that I struggle offensively in.
I play against the ghost a fair bit in various games and say I'm probably <10% without BIH and ~70% with it (per set). That BIH is a massive difference. I generally play what I call "semi-pro" ghost. Wherein I take BIH only if I don't have a clean pot on the first ball.