Admittedly I mostly skimmed this thread so sorry if I get off base, but I'll just make a few comments.
1. You really can't handicap pool. Maybe in a long race you can get close, but it's silly to think you can handicap something that doesn't have equal opportunities for all players.
Imagine bowling where every time your opponent throws a strike or gets a spare before you, you get a 0 for your score in that frame.
In golf no matter what the other guy does, you still get to hit your ball.
2. If you try to handicap pool and actually went with an aggressive enough "game spot" to even up a match between a 450 and a 700 Fargo, the 700 would not play in the tournament, and oddly enough, it'd be for the same reason the 450 won't play in an open event. They wouldn't think they'd have a chance. Fargo says with a 450 going to three games and a 700 going to 13 games the 700 is still 60% odds to win. How many of these "non-pro" 700 Fargo's would sign up for that event? (Would we tell them to "take their skirt off"?)
3. Capped events tend to work better than handicapped because as noted earlier by many people, handicaps don't really work. The guy who needs 2 or 3 innings to get out will rarely beat the guy who needs 1 or 2 innings no matter how many games they get. But if you cap it so everyone in your bracket needs 2 or 3 innings, then everyone feels they have a chance.
I think the closest anyone came to a true handicap for pool was that very short-lived thing Sigel was involved with where they gave lower skill players ball in hand in the middle of their turn. The theory was that with that system "anyone can run a table". But that still didn't solve the lack of opportunity for the player sitting in their chair. It seemed like it was going pretty well, but I believe the Covid shut down killed it, but I could be off on that timeline.
The other solution I thought was interesting was that "placement pool" deal that Earl used to talk about. Take the randomness of the break away and give every player the same layouts using a projector and score them on how many shots it takes to pocket the balls. Possibly with the lower cost of electronics this could still happen. I'm not saying it's the answer, but it is one of those things I would like to see play out. At lease with the "equal opportunity" format you could develop a golf like handicap and run it as an open event.
1. You really can't handicap pool. Maybe in a long race you can get close, but it's silly to think you can handicap something that doesn't have equal opportunities for all players.
Imagine bowling where every time your opponent throws a strike or gets a spare before you, you get a 0 for your score in that frame.
In golf no matter what the other guy does, you still get to hit your ball.
2. If you try to handicap pool and actually went with an aggressive enough "game spot" to even up a match between a 450 and a 700 Fargo, the 700 would not play in the tournament, and oddly enough, it'd be for the same reason the 450 won't play in an open event. They wouldn't think they'd have a chance. Fargo says with a 450 going to three games and a 700 going to 13 games the 700 is still 60% odds to win. How many of these "non-pro" 700 Fargo's would sign up for that event? (Would we tell them to "take their skirt off"?)
3. Capped events tend to work better than handicapped because as noted earlier by many people, handicaps don't really work. The guy who needs 2 or 3 innings to get out will rarely beat the guy who needs 1 or 2 innings no matter how many games they get. But if you cap it so everyone in your bracket needs 2 or 3 innings, then everyone feels they have a chance.
I think the closest anyone came to a true handicap for pool was that very short-lived thing Sigel was involved with where they gave lower skill players ball in hand in the middle of their turn. The theory was that with that system "anyone can run a table". But that still didn't solve the lack of opportunity for the player sitting in their chair. It seemed like it was going pretty well, but I believe the Covid shut down killed it, but I could be off on that timeline.
The other solution I thought was interesting was that "placement pool" deal that Earl used to talk about. Take the randomness of the break away and give every player the same layouts using a projector and score them on how many shots it takes to pocket the balls. Possibly with the lower cost of electronics this could still happen. I'm not saying it's the answer, but it is one of those things I would like to see play out. At lease with the "equal opportunity" format you could develop a golf like handicap and run it as an open event.