Break Stats -- 2024 International 10-Foot (Bigfoot) 10-Ball, November 2024

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Here are some aggregate break statistics from the 2024 International Bigfoot 10-Ball Challenge played November 23-24, 2024 at the World Golf Village Renaissance St. Augustine Resort in St. Augustine, Florida. Pay-per-view streaming was provided by Accu-Stats. This was an invitational 8-man, single-elimination event. Shane Van Boening won the event, defeating Lee Vann Corteza in the final match.

The commentators were Mark Wilson and Mike Sigel. The referees were Ken Shuman and Ed Liddawi. The Master of Ceremonies was Derrick Keith.

Conditions -- The conditions for this event included:
• Diamond 10-foot table. Mark Wilson said the corner pockets were 4¼", but on-site Bob Jewett found them to be 4½";​
• Simonis 860 Tournament Blue cloth;​
• Aramith Tournament balls with a blue-dots cue ball;​
• Accu-Rack Pro10 racking template;​
• referee racks with the 1-ball on the spot (2-ball and 3-ball need not be on the back corners);​
• alternate breaks from anywhere behind the head string;​
• jump cues not allowed;​
• foul on all balls;​
• all slop counts, even for 10-balls made on the break;​
• 30-second shot clock (even after the break and after push outs) with one automatic extension per player per rack; and​
• lag for opening break.​

The field size was reduced to just 8 players this year. The event's 7 matches (110 games), all streamed from the same table, were as follows (shown in the order in which they were played). The figures in parentheses are the Accu-Stats Total Performance Averages (TPA), as calculated by Accu-Stats and shown on the stream.

Sat., Nov. 23 (Round 1 matches)
1. Robbie Capito (.870) defeated John Morra (.736) 10-6​
2. Lee Vann Corteza (.777) d. Pijus Labutis (.735) 10-9​
3. Shane Van Boening (.875) d. Roberto Gomez (.844) 10-9​
4. Fedor Gorst (.922) d. Aloysius Yapp (.791) 10-3​

Sun., Nov. 24 (Matches 5 and 6 Semifinals, and Match 7 Finals)
5. Corteza (.969 -- best of the event) d. Gorst (.839) 10-4​
6. Van Boening (.892) d. Capito (.867) 10-4​
7. Van Boening (.907) d. Corteza (.824) 10-5​

Overall results

Successful breaks (made at least one ball and did not foul):
Match winners -- 65% (36 of 55)​
Match losers -- 47% (26 of 55)​
Total -- 56% (62 of 110)
Breaker won the game:
Match winners -- 71% (39 of 55)​
Match losers -- 44% (24 of 55)​
Total -- 57% (63 of 110)
Break-and-run games on all breaks:
Match winners -- 33% (18 of 55)​
Match losers -- 18% (10 of 55)​
Total -- 25% (28 of 110)
Break-and-run games on successful breaks (made at least one ball and did not foul):
Match winners -- 50% (18 of 36)​
Match losers -- 38% (10 of 26)​
Total -- 45% (28 of 62)

Here's a breakdown of the 110 games (for match winners and losers combined).

Breaker made at least one ball and did not foul:​
Breaker won the game: 45 (41% of the 110 games)​
Breaker lost the game: 17 (15%)​
Breaker fouled on the break:​
Breaker won the game: 3 (3%)​
Breaker lost the game: 8 (7%)​
Breaker broke dry (without fouling):​
Breaker won the game: 15 (14%)​
Breaker lost the game: 22 (20%)​
Therefore, whereas the breaker won 57% (63 0f 110) of all games,​
He won 73% (45 of 62) of the games in which the break was successful (made at least one ball and did not foul).​
He won 38% (18 of 48) of the games in which the break was unsuccessful (fouled or dry).​

Break-and-run games -- The 28 break-and-run games represented 25% of all 110 games, 44% of the 63 games won by the breaker, and 45% of the 62 games in which the break was successful (made a ball and didn't foul).

With alternating breaks, B&R "packages" of the normal type are not possible. But we can still look at the breaks of a given player and see how many he ran on his own successive breaks, and we can call these "alternate-break packages." The 28 break-and-run games consisted of 2 alternate-break 4-packs (1 each by Gorst and Van Boning), 1 alternate-break 3-pack (by Capito), 3 alternate-break 2-packs, and 11 singles.

10-balls on the break -- The 10-ball was made on the break three times (2.7% of all 112 breaks).
 
Miscellany from the data for the 2024 International Bigfoot 10-Ball Challenge:

• The most balls made on a single break was 4, done three times -- once by Capito in a B&R and twice by Van Boening (both game wins but not by B&R). Three balls were made on the break 4 times, (3 B&Rs and 1 game loss).

• The average number of balls made on the break was 1.1 (this includes dry and fouled breaks). On successful breaks (made at least one ball and did not foul), the average was 1.7.

• Number of innings:
44% (48 of 110) of the games ended in one inning – 35 games on the breaker's first inning (B&Rs) and 55 games on the non-breaker's first inning.​
23% (25 of 110) of the games ended on the second or third inning.​
34% (37 of 110) of the games went beyond the non-breaker's third visit to the table, with the longest two games ending on the non-breaker's 8th visit.​

• 41% (45 of 110) of the games were run out by the player who was at the table following the break. These run-outs were:
- By the breaker after successful breaks (B&R games) – 45% (28 of 62)​
- By the non-breaker after fouls on the break – 55% (6 of 11)​
- By the non-breaker after dry breaks – 30% (11 of 37)​

• The player who made the first ball after the break:
- Won the game in that same inning 52% of the time (56 of 107)​
- Won the game in a later inning 22% of the time (24 of 107)​
- Lost the game 25% of the time (27 of 107)​
[Note -- total games used here are 107 rather than 110 to eliminate the 3 games in which no ball was made after the break.]​

• The match loser won an average of 5.7 games in these races to 10. Two matches went to hill/hill; the fewest games won in a match was 3.

• The match that was longest in elapsed time, at about 158 minutes, and highest in average minutes per game, at 8.3, was Corteza d. Labutis 10-9. The elapsed time was measured from the lag until the winning ball was made (or conceded), so it includes time for racking and timeouts.

• The shortest match in elapsed time, at about 82 minutes was Van Boening d. Capito 10-4. The match lowest in average minutes per game, at 5.6, was Van Boening d. Corteza 10-5.

• The average elapsed time for these 7 races to 10 was 108 minutes, averaging 6.9 minutes per game.

• Breaking fouls averaged 1 for every 10.0 games, other fouls 1 for every 6.9 games, and missed shots about 1 for every 1.4 games.

• One or more safeties were played in about 43% of all games and in about 57% of games that were not B&Rs.
 
Mean of Accu-Stats Bigfoot match TPAs at the International Open:

■ For match winners​
2024 -- .887 (based on 7 scores)​
2023 -- .898 (12)​
2022 -- .906 (11)​
2021 -- .874 (12)​
■ For match losers​
2024 -- .805 (7)​
2023 -- .817 (12)​
2022 -- .838 (10)​
2021 -- .820 (11)​
■ Total​
2024 -- .846 (14)​
2023 -- .858 (24)​
2022 -- .874 (21)​
2021 -- .848 (23)​

[These mean values are likely to be a little different from aggregate TPAs calculated for each of these 3 groups.]
 
lee van always does well on the bigfoot it seems.

did well in the 14.1 too, but lost to lechner in a 2 visit performance. good match
 
lee van always does well on the bigfoot it seems. ...
Yes, Corteza has a pretty good record on 10-footers, but not as good as Mark Wilson keeps indicating in his commentary. This year, for example, Mark said at one point that on the 10-footer, Corteza is "always" in the top 4. At another point he said that if Corteza played in 10 of these events he would be in the top 4 in 9 of them. He is a bit prone to exaggeration on this.

10-Ball events on 10-foot tables have now been held 17 times -- 2 at the Southern Classic in 2012 and 2013, 11 at the DCC from 2013 through 2024 (no event in 2021), and 4 at the International from 2021-2024. Corteza has been in the money in 6 of those events -- no wins, but 2nd 4 times and 3rd/4th twice.

Southern Classic -- I don't know whether Corteza entered. If he did, he was not in the money.​
Derby City Classic -- He entered all 11 years -- lost his first match 5 times, lost his 2nd match once, and finished in the money 5 times (three 2nd place, two 3rd/4th)​
International -- He entered all 4 years -- lost his first match each of the first 3 years; finished 2nd this year (in the reduced field of just 8).​
So Corteza's 6 top 4s may have come in 15 events. Pretty good! And 4 of those 6 were in the most recent 8 events.
[Note: The first four 10-Ball events at the DCC, 2009-2012, were not Bigfoot events. They were played on 9-foot tables and were called the Fatboy 10-Ball Challenge. Corteza won the first one and finished 3rd/4th in the third one.]
 
Yes, Corteza has a pretty good record on 10-footers, but not as good as Mark Wilson keeps indicating in his commentary. This year, for example, Mark said at one point that on the 10-footer, Corteza is "always" in the top 4. At another point he said that if Corteza played in 10 of these events he would be in the top 4 in 9 of them. He is a bit prone to exaggeration on this.

10-Ball events on 10-foot tables have now been held 17 times -- 2 at the Southern Classic in 2012 and 2013, 11 at the DCC from 2013 through 2024 (no event in 2021), and 4 at the International from 2021-2024. Corteza has been in the money in 6 of those events -- no wins, but 2nd 4 times and 3rd/4th twice.

Southern Classic -- I don't know whether Corteza entered. If he did, he was not in the money.​
Derby City Classic -- He entered all 11 years -- lost his first match 5 times, lost his 2nd match once, and finished in the money 5 times (three 2nd place, two 3rd/4th)​
International -- He entered all 4 years -- lost his first match each of the first 3 years; finished 2nd this year (in the reduced field of just 8).​
So Corteza's 6 top 4s may have come in 15 events. Pretty good! And 4 of those 6 were in the most recent 8 events.
[Note: The first four 10-Ball events at the DCC, 2009-2012, were not Bigfoot events. They were played on 9-foot tables and were called the Fatboy 10-Ball Challenge. Corteza won the first one and finished 3rd/4th in the third one.]
The Fatboy events were great.

I’d sure have liked to be able to have stayed on board with them this whole time. However after the 2008 meltdown (hit me in 9 & 10) I had to make some cutbacks. Sadly this was one of those things. I knew 100% it would be a very long last event and I was very happy to be involved in the early days. Credit has to go to Greg Sullivan as it was 100% his idea.

Best
Fatboy<———just a spectator now🤩
 
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