I had the exact same reaction. Fargo 800 isn't what it used to be and calling anyone below 800 elite is probably inappropriate. A Fargo of 790 puts you as World #112. The globalization of pool over the past decade has greatly changed the playing field and amazing players are popping up in every corner of the world.Just that an 800 barely gets you top 70 these days...
I had the exact same reaction. Fargo 800 isn't what it used to be and calling anyone below 800 elite is probably inappropriate. A Fargo of 790 puts you as World #112. The globalization of pool over the past decade has greatly changed the playing field and amazing players are popping up in every corner of the world.
No doubt, young players in the 775 to 799 range must be viewed as having great possibilities, but to be fair, all players below Fargo 800 tend to be longshots, not contenders, at the majors.
This era of pool is mind-blowing in that the best players shoot so darn straight that the continuing toughening of playing conditions isn't slowing them down much.
Am surprised Germany has most in Europe. Tot Poland, UK or Russia will have more
Nothing surprised me. There has been enough time now for the superiority of the Filipino's who don't travel much to get on the biggest lists.
The players are not any better because they are in the higher 800's now. Thats FargoRate creep. See this list from 2015 of many of the same names:
These are the Fargo Ratings of the 96 (of 128) participants for the US Open who have established ratings (at least 200 games in the system). These ratings are current as of 10-7-15
1 Shane Van Boening USA 824.5
2 Dennis Orcollo Philippines 811.5
3 Pin Yi Ko Taiwan, ROC 805.4
4 Niels Feijen Denmark 804.8
5 Yu Lung Chang Taiwan, ROC 800.1
6 Carlo Biado Philippines 798.9
7 Mike Dechaine USA 797.8
8 Lee Van Corteza Philippines 796.4
9 Kai Lun Hsu Taiwan, ROC 795.9
10 Jayson Shaw Scotland 792.6
11 Darren Appleton England 790.9
12 Efren Reyes Philippines 790.7
13 Ping Chung Ko Taiwan, ROC...
- mikepage
- Replies: 7
- Forum: Main Forum
This list is from the Fargo website.This list is wrong. It states right on the Fargo website that fewer than 20 people are over 800.
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Yes, for the younger players for sure. The ones who were 40 then, and 50 now, and have a much higher rating now.....doesn't pass the sniff test.that's probably true, but it's also true that some of the "same names" were less complete players in 2015, like jayson and lil ko.
SVB is 20 points higher. I think that could be legitimate improvement. I think the increased competition and motivation has improved a lot of players.... The players are not any better because they are in the higher 800's now. Thats FargoRate creep. See this list from 2015 of many of ...
Not a chance in hell!SVB is 20 points higher. I think that could be legitimate improvement. I think the increased competition and motivation has improved a lot of players.
Yes, the more players in a rating system means the more granularity needed to differentiate the players, meaning the top end will drift upwards.Nothing surprised me. There has been enough time now for the superiority of the Filipino's who don't travel much to get on the biggest lists.
The players are not any better because they are in the higher 800's now. Thats FargoRate creep. See this list from 2015 of many of the same names:
These are the Fargo Ratings of the 96 (of 128) participants for the US Open who have established ratings (at least 200 games in the system). These ratings are current as of 10-7-15
1 Shane Van Boening USA 824.5
2 Dennis Orcollo Philippines 811.5
3 Pin Yi Ko Taiwan, ROC 805.4
4 Niels Feijen Denmark 804.8
5 Yu Lung Chang Taiwan, ROC 800.1
6 Carlo Biado Philippines 798.9
7 Mike Dechaine USA 797.8
8 Lee Van Corteza Philippines 796.4
9 Kai Lun Hsu Taiwan, ROC 795.9
10 Jayson Shaw Scotland 792.6
11 Darren Appleton England 790.9
12 Efren Reyes Philippines 790.7
13 Ping Chung Ko Taiwan, ROC...
- mikepage
- Replies: 7
- Forum: Main Forum
Do you really believe the 5th best player from about 10 years ago would only be the 70th best player today?SVB is 20 points higher. I think that could be legitimate improvement. I think the increased competition and motivation has improved a lot of players.
One caveat, that older list was not the entire fargroate list (as is the new list from today). It was only the players entered in the 2015 US Open who were established.Do you really believe the 5th best player from about 10 years ago would only be the 70th best player today?
I'm a big believer that the level of play is higher now than ever, even 10 years ago. But even I can see there's more than just that one factor at play here.
Thanks, I should have noticed that.One caveat, that older list was not the entire fargroate list (as is the new list from today). It was only the players entered in the 2015 US Open who were established.