Congradulations, keep having fun! (its so much more fun when you win isnt it?)
The APA has a tiered ranking system, in 8 ball- S/L 2 is the lowest or the most elementary player and S/L 7 is the highest or most skilled player. 9 ball is a similar system with S/L 1 being the lowest and S/L 9 being the highest. As you meet certain criteria you advance in skill level but without (normally) a medical reason you can only ever drop one skill level, however if you play in a national APA event the skill you participated at will be your new "low" mark - you should never drop below that (but it happens). The criteria is a convoluted system of wins and losses innings played, "implied" innings in a win all from the best ten of your last twenty matches. This is all designed to prevent sand-bagging, but if you know the system..... well, you get it.Never having played in APA or other similar super ranked leagues, is it possible for someone to explain the meanings of the ranks like SL4-SL6 and such?
Thanks Kindly
The APA has a tiered ranking system, in 8 ball- S/L 2 is the lowest or the most elementary player and S/L 7 is the highest or most skilled player. 9 ball is a similar system with S/L 1 being the lowest and S/L 9 being the highest. As you meet certain criteria you advance in skill level but without (normally) a medical reason you can only ever drop one skill level, however if you play in a national APA event the skill you participated at will be your new "low" mark - you should never drop below that (but it happens). The criteria is a convoluted system of wins and losses innings played, "implied" innings in a win all from the best ten of your last twenty matches. This is all designed to prevent sand-bagging, but if you know the system..... well, you get it.
Celophanewrap...The APA handicap formula is neither convoluted or poorly designed. Sandbagging almost always only occurs when both teams allow it, either by choice, or by poor scorekeeping. Defensive shots should be marked, whether the opposing player/team thinks so or not. Done correctly, and playing your best, the handicap system works well, for what it is.
Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com
Yes you are correct, in a perfect world. The rules are written as though everyone will play fair and I'm sure we both know that's rarely the case. It's not poorly designed and it is well intentioned but whether or not it works well is debatable. There always those that try to manipulate it and some are successful, and some just whine about it. I suppose it's reasonably as fair as it can be. I do believe it to be convoluted but I suppose it has to be that way to be kept top-secret.
Don't you love it when you play a good safe on someone that has never even seen a safe played in a game, they look at you like a lobster just crawled out of your ear. So, just curious, how is it that you played twice in an APA match, and how is it that you got to sudden death?
Congrats, KoolKiller!
I've been a SL5 for just shy of 2 years now, and I'm looking forward to moving up to SL6 as well. (Sadly, I'm not improving much lately, and it doesn't appear that I will make it by the goal I set for myself....though I shall not give up!)
Congrats. I am going back to APA this Monday. Only played about a year and a half before. Made a 5 in two sessions. Only been playing the last 3 months after not playing for 4 years. Probably shooting more like a 6 but will be ranked as a 5 to start since that's what I was 4 years ago when I stopped playing. I refuse to sandbag, whether others do it or not.
Congrats sir! Putting in the work and learning strategy will skyrocket you in the APA... I started to play some excellent players gambling towards the end of my APA run and I moved to a 7 in 9 and 8 ball pretty quickly after being stagnant as a 6 for a while. My 9 ball ranking move came after I beat a SL7 player 20-0 in a match... if you haven't done it, I'll tell you it was the 2nd most gratifying thing that happened to me in the league. The first, of course, was the free trip to Vegas and all the extra money it generated![]()
Never having played in APA or other similar super ranked leagues, is it possible for someone to explain the meanings of the ranks like SL4-SL6 and such?
Thanks Kindly
Do you have many 7's in your division?
It's actually tough to move to a 7 unless you're beating some. I've been a 6 forever and while people complain that I should be a 7, for some reason I haven't gone up. I figure just play and the handicap will sort itself out eventually.
We only have one 7 in out division and we play primarily on 9 footers. Going to 7 footers feels like shooters marbles into the ocean.
Just checked my division roster, 10 teams total with 7 SL7 players. I do know some strong 6s are better shooters than some of the weak 7s but it seems the 6s are never moved up. not sure why.
Never having played in APA or other similar super ranked leagues, is it possible for someone to explain the meanings of the ranks like SL4-SL6 and such?
Thanks Kindly