matthew said:
What are the main differences between B and C players? Is it that B players are more consistent in their runouts? Or do they play better safeties, break better etc?
I have seen definitions here, all of which were problematic IMO and here is why.
The first referenced things like being about to get out from the six 2 out of 3 times, etc. But that is 9-ball. So, as an 8 ball player, it is hard to relate to, and it would cause additional difficulty for 14-1 or op. For instance, I played op. I probably got lucky that time, but this example will suffice for what I am trying to say. The guy played me 8 ball and went out in 1-2 innings in the games we played, so I figured he is not a bad player. He had just told me the OP rules. So then we go to another table to play op and I would be a D in that guys 9ball definition, I guess,or in an sl one. But yet, I beat this guy 8-2 in op, who is at least a c+ in 8ball if not a b-, at least by my understanding. So, a d beating a b, with no spot, dead even? Granted it was only one game, even though it took as long as a race to seven in 9 ball typically does, but the point being, the two games or even op to 8ball are very different. Then if the game is 14-1, do you then rate by their typical runs, say 25, 50,75 balls or whatever? I do not think that the 9ball definition would make much sense to 14-1 either. How do you rate a player across all of the games or is it even possible, unless you come up with a rating for each game?
Then I have seen the one relating to sls. Like 2-3 d-, for example and on up the later with 7 typically a b or in a few cases, a. Then you have to realize this is too simplistic because the leagues vary from town to town and even sometimes in the same town. So a person who is a sl5 in one place may be a sl7 in another place or lord forbid (but i have unfortunately seen a few), an sl3. So is that person a b,c, or d?
The sl thing imo only makes sense when the league is typical, that is not an abnormally strong one, nor a weak one. I always thought that the one I came from was typical, but am now seeing that lots of folks who were sl3s in the previous one could beat the sl4s in the new one, whereas the sl6-7 in the new league seem like true sixes and sevens to me based on what they were in the previous one. Using the sl thing is perhaps imo, the hardest to tell where you are on the spectrum of b,c,d.
Then I have seen the one assuming 8ball, relating to how many balls they can run on an open table. This one may be better, but what about a player who has strategy, safety skills, only runs 3 balls but gets shape on those.They then play smart and duck so all their balls wont be off while the other players ball are on the table, and they are snookered. How then is that player worse than a person who runs 5, but has no shape or defense? some will say that all three grow together but while it is often the case, I have seen people who could pot any shot on an open table, say run 5 balls, have no shape or safe game also.
From previous posts, you sound to be pretty good to me, not going to try to put you in an a,b,c I think that many of us put ourselves in boxes, and even when we try to get out of that habit, when playing handicapped league, is all to easy to slip into. Open, no spot tournaments seem to take a person out of a box the best, IMo, because it does not matter what rank your opponent is because at that tournament, there are no rank, everyone playing dead even. You are just there to play hard and win as many matches as you can. JMO.
But as referncing b to c. All of the above but bs typical play smarter, imo. And sometimes, that can be the most important thing that makes them a b, strategy, but then that is assuming the game not to be 14-1.
Laura