As many of you know, sometime in the 1980's, Pat Fleming invented a scoring system to measure how well a pool player played over the course of some number of games, usually one match. This is the Accu-Stats "Total Performance Average," or TPA. A player's TPA ranges from zero to one, much like a batting average.
Before I complain about it, I want to clarify that I give all the credit in the world to Pat Fleming for coming up with and promoting it. His TPA is the closest thing I know of to a generally accepted "pool score."
But can't we improve it? Here's what I don't like about the TPA:
1) It's so difficult to use the official scoresheets that I've never met anyone who fills them out. I track matches all the time (informally), and all I ever count is balls and errors. The added value from the complicated scoresheets is beyond me.
2) Scoring has a subjective element that requires non-trivial pool experience. An unplanned safety is a position error, but a planned one is not. Whether a safety was planned or unplanned is not always easy to figure out. And what about two-way shots?
3) The TPA cannot distinguish between meaningless errors and critical ones. All errors are not equal!
4) The TPA works fine for rotation-based games and almost as well for 8-ball, but it doesn't work very well for straight pool, and it's useless for one-pocket.
My dream is a scoring system that (1) is simple to understand and apply, (2) leaves no room for disagreement about how a shot should be counted, (3) works well for all variations of pool, and (4) eventually becomes as well known in sports as the idea of a bowling average or scoring above/below par in golf.
Here's a starting point:
Let's say that all shots are either "good" or "bad." A "good shot" makes you the favorite to win. A "bad shot" makes your opponent the favorite. Your score = number of good shots divided by all shots taken.
The trick, of course, is defining good and bad shots with more precision. Any ideas?
Before I complain about it, I want to clarify that I give all the credit in the world to Pat Fleming for coming up with and promoting it. His TPA is the closest thing I know of to a generally accepted "pool score."
But can't we improve it? Here's what I don't like about the TPA:
1) It's so difficult to use the official scoresheets that I've never met anyone who fills them out. I track matches all the time (informally), and all I ever count is balls and errors. The added value from the complicated scoresheets is beyond me.
2) Scoring has a subjective element that requires non-trivial pool experience. An unplanned safety is a position error, but a planned one is not. Whether a safety was planned or unplanned is not always easy to figure out. And what about two-way shots?
3) The TPA cannot distinguish between meaningless errors and critical ones. All errors are not equal!
4) The TPA works fine for rotation-based games and almost as well for 8-ball, but it doesn't work very well for straight pool, and it's useless for one-pocket.
My dream is a scoring system that (1) is simple to understand and apply, (2) leaves no room for disagreement about how a shot should be counted, (3) works well for all variations of pool, and (4) eventually becomes as well known in sports as the idea of a bowling average or scoring above/below par in golf.
Here's a starting point:
Let's say that all shots are either "good" or "bad." A "good shot" makes you the favorite to win. A "bad shot" makes your opponent the favorite. Your score = number of good shots divided by all shots taken.
The trick, of course, is defining good and bad shots with more precision. Any ideas?