wish I knew the answer to this
John,
Best I recall, break and runs are a losing percentage in competition. I don't know if anyone has compiled a large database of break and wins, maybe accu-stats has and I am unaware of it. The number of breaks and wins is what I would like to know for the various games. One-pocket, no doubt the break is huge, all other games it depends on both the player's abilities and their smarts. As a gambler, I was never a run out player if I could lock up the other player with a good "accidental" safety. My break and run percentage was very low. My break and win percentage was huge.
Hu
John,
Best I recall, break and runs are a losing percentage in competition. I don't know if anyone has compiled a large database of break and wins, maybe accu-stats has and I am unaware of it. The number of breaks and wins is what I would like to know for the various games. One-pocket, no doubt the break is huge, all other games it depends on both the player's abilities and their smarts. As a gambler, I was never a run out player if I could lock up the other player with a good "accidental" safety. My break and run percentage was very low. My break and win percentage was huge.
Hu
JB Cases said:Actually since we talking stats - AccuStats tracked this very notion that the break is an advantage and I believe - feel free to correct me - that they found that the breaker lost more than they won over a large number of matches.
I certainly believe that if both players are in peak condition then it's very close to 50/50 each game. Although between the two I'd give Alex the slight edge because he simply has six more years of experience playing top shelf pool and unlike Strickland he doesn't give up ever. I say Strickland because if I want to use the experience as an edge then of course Strickland has a lifetime more than Shane does.