One thing that has always bothered me is there have been several attempts at coming up with a national rating system.
APA, BCA, NPL, USPPA etc as we know all have their own way of rating players. They are either based on how many balls are sunk or how many games they have won. The problem with these type of rating system is that players are rated based on their particular area. (Example) Lets say you have 6 players, 3 in one area and 3 in another area. Now lets give them ratings based on their skill. Now lets say that each area has an ABC (the three players). But lets say that if you were to transport the A player to the other area his actual skill level is only a C. But when he plays in his area he can easily beat a B and C Player thus giving him the A ranking in his area. So using wins or losses or number of balls dropped is skewed by the skill level in an area.
The other type of ranking is self ranking. There is 99 from Pool and Billiards, Fargo (which is pretty good) from Mike Page and a few others. There is a slight problem with these in that they are based on a random layout each time you do the test. You break and continue from there keeping score of your match and then you post those scores against other players. Lets sy you and another player are evenly ranked on skill. You break and get a few clusters and the other player breaks and gets none. He runs out and you only sink 3 balls. Doesn't mean he is a better player it just means he got luckier on the break.
Well now comes the reason for my post. If you had a set table layout that you used to get your ranking then the rating system is equal. I have come up with a table layout that has most common shots with a couple of difficult position plays for you to try. Basically you start with this layout and start to run the table. When you miss mark down how many balls you got on the run. If you run the table reset the layout and you get a 10 for that set (two points for the 9). Play 10 sets and total your score. A perfect game would be 100.
If this seems like a good idea and you would like to compare your scores with other players maybe Mike would like to adopt this as a national ranking system and come up with a way for you to compare your results privately with other players.
Here is the layout...
APA, BCA, NPL, USPPA etc as we know all have their own way of rating players. They are either based on how many balls are sunk or how many games they have won. The problem with these type of rating system is that players are rated based on their particular area. (Example) Lets say you have 6 players, 3 in one area and 3 in another area. Now lets give them ratings based on their skill. Now lets say that each area has an ABC (the three players). But lets say that if you were to transport the A player to the other area his actual skill level is only a C. But when he plays in his area he can easily beat a B and C Player thus giving him the A ranking in his area. So using wins or losses or number of balls dropped is skewed by the skill level in an area.
The other type of ranking is self ranking. There is 99 from Pool and Billiards, Fargo (which is pretty good) from Mike Page and a few others. There is a slight problem with these in that they are based on a random layout each time you do the test. You break and continue from there keeping score of your match and then you post those scores against other players. Lets sy you and another player are evenly ranked on skill. You break and get a few clusters and the other player breaks and gets none. He runs out and you only sink 3 balls. Doesn't mean he is a better player it just means he got luckier on the break.
Well now comes the reason for my post. If you had a set table layout that you used to get your ranking then the rating system is equal. I have come up with a table layout that has most common shots with a couple of difficult position plays for you to try. Basically you start with this layout and start to run the table. When you miss mark down how many balls you got on the run. If you run the table reset the layout and you get a 10 for that set (two points for the 9). Play 10 sets and total your score. A perfect game would be 100.
If this seems like a good idea and you would like to compare your scores with other players maybe Mike would like to adopt this as a national ranking system and come up with a way for you to compare your results privately with other players.
Here is the layout...