Didn't see anything about this on their Facebook page.
Because they deleted all the posts and then blocked those of us who made the posts. A pretty clear indication of guilt.
Didn't see anything about this on their Facebook page.
This is a very good reason that I have always had the policy that strangers start out with a high handicap unless their ability is known to be above the default handicap.
IF a stranger is ASKED what their ranking in league is and they say that they don't have one or otherwise fudge it then I either bar them or raise them to the highest handicap.
The fault here IMO lies with both parties, the player who allowed himself to be put in lower than he should and the TD who put him in lower than he should have been put in.
That said unless it was specifically stated at the beginning that handicaps could be revised at any time I wouldn't have raised him up.
I personally think you can't be that fluid, it's not fair to the people who got beat at the lower handicap. You have to have a policy and stick to it throughout the event.
My default would be if you can't PROVE your level to my satisfaction then you're going in at a high rating. If you want to continue in my events then your rating will settle to where it should be.
John - has run many successful handicapped tournaments.
Maybe the title of this thread is accurate after all??? Hmmm
lol handicapped tournaments
(snip)
Any thoughts on this
Stopped playing in tournaments years ago its either 2 am and your not yet in the money or the tour (director) makes more than the winner I would rather play with friends or shoot alone than give these assholes $100 to play in there tours
I've been running tournaments for years and most are handicapped. You bump the player, but making some replay a match, never heard of and that's wrong IMO. If Megan were such a good TD, seems she never should have taken that guys word or at least watched him play the first few matches to guage what his real handicap was.
We have people come in all the time, "I'm a 4 in APA/TAP" and that usually translates to a 6 in our system. I usually split the difference and tell them right up front, "If your handicap is wrong, we will adjust during the tournament, so it could go up or down". I've never had a problem and never brought someone who was ELIMINATED from the tournament back to the bracket. Giving a player the option to replay a match or forfeit, based on your (TD) error, is wrong. As a TD, you have to suck it up and say "I made a mistake in letting this person play, he has been raised and we move on". Whatever the case, it still sounds as if there was some allegiance between Megan and the player that was already eliminated from the tourney. She was wrong, PERIOD.
Hi, My name is Megan Royal, and I am the tournament director for the tournament that is being talked about in this post at Shore Thing Billiards.
I think that this is the prime example of typical pool player crying, and it is unfortunate that people that read this start off thinking it is truth as if it is coming from the horse's mouth and 100% honest.
The 73 year old man in question?!? He and his son-in-law represented his ability as total novice, during one of my weekly 9 ball tournaments. The exact date was February 1st, 2013. (I keep excellent records of when all players start playing in my tournaments, and why I ranked them the skill level they are) The man and his son-in-law told me that he didn't really play competitively at all, and didn't give me any league handicap for him. Ask any new player that enters Shore Thing Billiards for my tournaments and they will tell you that the first question I ask is "do you play any leagues?"
So, accepting the word of a player that had played in several events that I have played in, and respect (GSBT) I handicapped this unassuming older gentleman at a 3. He didn't advance to the paid out spots of the weekly tournament he participated in, so when he and his son-in-law showed up for my added $1,000 tournament, I entered him as a skill level 3. He lost his first match-up to a player that was a skill level 11 (this format hosted skill levels 1 thru 12). His second match was against another skill level 3. This opponent played in the mini-tournament the night before, and was a player that I knew their ACCURATE handicap from another in-house tournament format that I was familiar with and could equate to mine. He won this match, and it was not a close one. His next round match-up forfeited. So after advancing, (not my boyfriend) Gatlin loses to him. Racing to 7 with 3 games on the wire and the 7 & 8 called, the player in question wins by a big margin (7-3 not 7-5 as reported above). My first reaction was shock. I play in my format as a level 4, and I do not think I could beat Gatlin with that game, so I questioned the skill level of the older gentleman. The owner of STB is a BCA league operator and knew that the man played BCA. After pulling up the last sessions stats, I found out that his BCA handicap out of 10 was an 8. He was ranked in the top 10 of his league.
I NEVER would agree to play a BCA 8 as a 3 in my weekly tournament or our 2 day tournament.
The match in question was the final match of day 1, and by the time I had all the REAL information on the player in question, he had already left to go home. Unfortunately, I had no contact number or email for the gentleman so the only option I had was to inform Gatlin that he was going to replay his match the next day, as he was still in the poolroom.
I informed the player in question that he was going to replay his previous match at a higher skill level the following day, when he arrived. This is my policy, and I am not the only tournament director that plays the match over.
The gentleman said that he accepted his new skill level, and wasn't upset that he was going up in handicap, but he didn't agree with playing the previous match again.
However, the tournament directors' policies are what governs every tournament and mine include replaying matches at a different skill level when I believe the current one is unfair.
Thank you for reading all sides of the story before jumping to the conclusion that STB and myself are categorized with the other shady poolrooms, owners, and directors.
This weekend we paid out more cash that any other tournament with like entry fees I have ever heard of, only taking $5 greens fees, adding $1,000 guaranteed, and auctioning players twice at the full field and the final 24. With both auctions and tournament payout, 1st place stood to take home $2,700.
The winner was 78 years old.
Feel free to private message me, email me, or call me (since my contact information was already shared above) for the name of the gentleman so you all can see his true BCA handicap in person. (hard to deny)
Thank you, again.
Hi, My name is Megan Royal, and I am the tournament director for the tournament that is being talked about in this post at Shore Thing Billiards.
I think that this is the prime example of typical pool player crying, and it is unfortunate that people that read this start off thinking it is truth as if it is coming from the horse's mouth and 100% honest.
The 73 year old man in question?!? He and his son-in-law represented his ability as total novice, during one of my weekly 9 ball tournaments. The exact date was February 1st, 2013. (I keep excellent records of when all players start playing in my tournaments, and why I ranked them the skill level they are) The man and his son-in-law told me that he didn't really play competitively at all, and didn't give me any league handicap for him. Ask any new player that enters Shore Thing Billiards for my tournaments and they will tell you that the first question I ask is "do you play any leagues?"
So, accepting the word of a player that had played in several events that I have played in, and respect (GSBT) I handicapped this unassuming older gentleman at a 3. He didn't advance to the paid out spots of the weekly tournament he participated in, so when he and his son-in-law showed up for my added $1,000 tournament, I entered him as a skill level 3. He lost his first match-up to a player that was a skill level 11 (this format hosted skill levels 1 thru 12). His second match was against another skill level 3. This opponent played in the mini-tournament the night before, and was a player that I knew their ACCURATE handicap from another in-house tournament format that I was familiar with and could equate to mine. He won this match, and it was not a close one. His next round match-up forfeited. So after advancing, (not my boyfriend) Gatlin loses to him. Racing to 7 with 3 games on the wire and the 7 & 8 called, the player in question wins by a big margin (7-3 not 7-5 as reported above). My first reaction was shock. I play in my format as a level 4, and I do not think I could beat Gatlin with that game, so I questioned the skill level of the older gentleman. The owner of STB is a BCA league operator and knew that the man played BCA. After pulling up the last sessions stats, I found out that his BCA handicap out of 10 was an 8. He was ranked in the top 10 of his league.
I NEVER would agree to play a BCA 8 as a 3 in my weekly tournament or our 2 day tournament. The match in question was the final match of day 1, and by the time I had all the REAL information on the player in question, he had already left to go home. Unfortunately, I had no contact number or email for the gentleman so the only option I had was to inform Gatlin that he was going to replay his match the next day, as he was still in the poolroom.
I informed the player in question that he was going to replay his previous match at a higher skill level the following day, when he arrived. This is my policy, and I am not the only tournament director that plays the match over.
The gentleman said that he accepted his new skill level, and wasn't upset that he was going up in handicap, but he didn't agree with playing the previous match again.
However, the tournament directors' policies are what governs every tournament and mine include replaying matches at a different skill level when I believe the current one is unfair.
Thank you for reading all sides of the story before jumping to the conclusion that STB and myself are categorized with the other shady poolrooms, owners, and directors.
This weekend we paid out more cash that any other tournament with like entry fees I have ever heard of, only taking $5 greens fees, adding $1,000 guaranteed, and auctioning players twice at the full field and the final 24. With both auctions and tournament payout, 1st place stood to take home $2,700.
The winner was 78 years old.
Feel free to private message me, email me, or call me (since my contact information was already shared above) for the name of the gentleman so you all can see his true BCA handicap in person. (hard to deny)
Thank you, again.
Gatlin, a 9 was put out by your Father in law, a 3 supposed to be a 4 as you clearly state and no one stated that when he signed up! He beat a 9 by a score of 7-3 not hill-hill.