Folks:
The real reason why I'm responding here, is I FIRMLY and VEHEMENTLY disagree with APA Operator's "excuse-in-a-can" stating the reason why a handicap limit exists is to prevent "super teams" from being built that overrun everybody else. This is corporate "here, give 'em this" drivel that is passed on from L.O. generation to L.O. generation.
What I FIRMLY and VEHEMENTLY disagree with is the practice of using terms like "excuse-in-a-can" and "drinking the Kool-Aid" by those who have absolutely no knowledge of how things work between APA corporate and it's network of L.O.'s. The whole "brainwash" and "conspiracy" theories are old and are extremely laughable. They also set up your built-in defense - "you can't tell me otherwise because you're part of the conspiracy." To me, that's the same as calling me a liar, something to which I take great offense.
I'm second-generation L.O., and I can honestly say no one has ever instructed me to give canned answers to any question. Ask anything you want, and I'll give you a straight-up, honest answer, as long as it doesn't involve me divulging any trade secrets. And I'll tell you if that's the case.
I can just envision this fictitious scene, which seems to sum-up the APA-corporate excuse facade:
- A crowd is outside the APA headquarters, bashing at the huge steel-reinforced door, picketing and shouting how the "23" handicap limit is such an achilles heel to the enjoyment of the league.
- Instead of someone answering the door and opening it, a William F. Buckley or Bill Stein droll voice appears over the door's intercom system, and monotonously gives this "excuse-in-a-can" for the 23 rule -- again, without anyone ever answering the door. And then tells the crowd to go away. "Go away please... go away please... go away please" (in "Bueller... bueller... bueller" style).
For someone who doesn't like to pile on, you sure seem to be enjoying yourself this time. Funny, but completely inaccurate.
The fact is, you can stack a team with the "best" players (which I'm assuming APA Operator means a bunch of 7s [in 8-ball] or 9s [in 9-ball]), but that's no guarantee that they'll win. In fact, most APA 7s (or 9s) that I know, absolutely abhor the idea of being matched up with a 3 or a 4. And team captains know it! I occasionally go to Big Shot Billiards in East Windsor, CT for the Eastern Regionals often, and I walk around, listening to the teams strategizing the matches. There's a trick they call "cutting the 7 off at the knees" -- matching up a strong "3" against the "7" that was just put up by the opposing team. More often than not, the 7 gets killed in this match. He/she gets cut-off at the knees.
Before I became an operator, I played in the APA. I've heard the term "cutting the 7 off at the knees", and it always referred to an UNDER-RATED lower skill level player taking advantage of a larger-than-deserved spot.
And, let's assume worst-case scenario as a hypothetical situation for a moment. Bear with me on this one: "the APA secretly knows the 'Equalizer' handicap system is broken in that it doesn't adequately equalize the difference in skill between, say, a 7 and a 3 [i.e. they think the 7 still has the advantage]."
If that's secretly true, why not fix the damn thing?!? Why not introduce a ball spot into the "Equalizer" handicap system? Introduce a ball spot in that system (e.g. "a difference in handicap of two or more between the opposing players" [e.g. a 7 plays a 5] invokes a ball spot for the lower-skill-level player), and you *watch* what happens! It will change the game. Now instead of the "23" rule, teams can stack their team with 7s/9s all they want, but they risk being chopped-off at the knees by this considerable advantage the lower-skill-level player has with this change to the handicapping system. The lower-skill level players will learn how to use the ball spot to their advantage, making sure (in 8-ball) to tie-up the higher-skill-level opponent's category of balls with one of his/her own, and it becomes a different game.
Hypothetically speaking, it does become a different game - a completely different game. In the hypothetical rules for your hypothetical game, the "how to win" a GAME becomes completely different. Before anyone else mentions it, this is different from the case of APA 9-Ball, where the scoring and handicapping make WINNING GAMES a secondary concern. In APA 9-Ball, you win the game when you sink the 9 on a legal shot, just like in any other version of 9-Ball. In your hypothetical scenario, you've changed how the actual game of 8-Ball is won. You've hypothetically bastardized the rules and the hypothetical players on here would have a field day with it.
Besides, all your hypothetical "fix" does is extend the handicap system where the highest level is not 7, it's "7 by two". There are plenty of players who could play at the new max and still dominate. However, that's not even necessary. Suppose "7 by two" makes the match between a 7 and a 3 a toss-up. A team full of 7's would then be as average as any other team in the league. EXCEPT FOR THE OTHER TEAM OF BETTER 7'S WHO CAN DOMINATE THEM. No "by two"'s in those matchups, so this team of super-7's will still win the league. Extend the handicap system as far as you want, and this will still be true.
Here's another hypothetical scenario. Bear with me (there, now I can apparently say anything I want without having to stand behind my words). Say you could create a handicap system with NO highest level. It might not even be that difficult to come up with a way of assigning numbers with no max. Then you'd be able to establish a fair, even spot between any two players, right? In this hypothetical system, there would be no need for a limit. Every match is a toss-up. I believe that the only thing that prevents this hypothetical scenario from becoming reality is time. Races would be so long you couldn't fit them into the time allotted. When someone invents a time stagnation device that generates a field where an hour inside the field is just a few minutes outside of it (hey, I'm speaking hypothetically and you're bearing with me :wink

Just in case any of the APA advocates may question my experience in league operations, let me present my credentials. My name is Sean Leinen, and I used to run the Boston Billiards 8-ball and 9-ball leagues for 3 years at a particular Boston Billiards location (the Danbury, CT location -- the largest one), before Boston Billiards closed it in January 2009. Back when I ran that league, we used ball spots to equalize the difference in skill between players. Depending on the difference in skill level between the two opponents, there can be up to a 3 ball spot! (E.g. if a "7" plays a "3", it was a 7 - 3 race with a 3 ball spot for the 3. On the big 9-foot tables, this multi-ball spot system worked out really well, since it took into consideration that the distance on the table itself was a disadvantage for the weaker player. However, on the small barboxes, a single ball spot will do just fine.) I can tell you that when the teams were submitting their scoresheets to me after the matches were over, the lower skill-level players were beating the high skill-level players (and vice-versa) at an equal rate.
I know that the APA is exponentially larger than the Boston Billiards leagues ever were even in their heyday, but guys, come on, fix the system! Isn't the growing rancor outside that huge steel door starting to cause that steel door to rattle off of its hinges?
Are you still speaking hypothetically? If you're not, then this is where I've been conditioned to say "why fix something that's not broken"? Oh wait, I HAVEN'T been conditioned at all, but you don't believe that because you know everything that goes on inside that huge steel door, even though you've never been on that side. Seriously, you don't know how offensive that is to me. I don't need your credentials, and I won't question your ethics. Please, return the favor.
APA Operator, the only turing machine is the very one you're offering -- that pop-top "excuse-in-a-can" (being passed out by APA Corporate in huge truckloads) that the "23" rule exists to prevent teams being stacked. From what I've seen and experience (as an L.O.), nothing could be further from the truth. The "cutting the 7 off at the knees" technique is very real and actively used. Don't you think a team "stacked," as you call it, with 7s (or 9s in 9-ball) would be a target that other teams with lower-ranked players would lick their chops over?
No, I don't. Perhaps you mean "under-ranked players"? The question I have to answer often is "Why is such-and-such allowed to play in the league? He's so good nobody else can beat him, not even other 7's." Lots of players welcome those matches, but none of them expect to win.
You know what terms I hear way more often than "cutting the 7 off at the knees"? "Sacrificial lambs" and "throwing off".
That's exactly right, hence my point/discussion above. "Cutting the 7/9 off at the knees" is a very effective technique, and I think APA corporate knows it. But they continue to airlift and truckload out those huge pallets of pop-top "excuse-in-a-can" to cover up the real reason for why the "23" rules exists: capitalism. Now, there's nothing wrong with capitalism. If the reason for the 23 rule is as we expect, to fragment the team to form new teams (and thus grow the APA), then plainly state that. There's nothing wrong with honesty. Secretly, "we all know" that there's revenue involved, but we also know that the APA strives, at least from the corporate marketing effort (not necessarily at the regional level) to pump more dollars back into the sport with tournament/sponsorship deals, etc.
It IS a nice side-effect, but it has nothing to do with why the 23 rule exists. APA has been around for 32 years, and I've been an operator for more than half of that, and not once has that been mentioned to me as a strategy for growth. Not once have I ever changed a skill level for any reason other than I thought the new level would more accurately reflect the player's ability. I'm inside those doors, and THAT's what I hear APA corporate preaching. Choose to believe me or not, it doesn't really matter to me. The only sure way to endure is to do things the right way, and one group is the CLEAR leader in the endurance contest. Interpret that how you will.
I think what the APA does in striving to keep pool alive and in the mindset of the general public is laudable. I have no issue with the APA other than the evasive and weasely excuses given for the existence of a particular rule. Be honest/upfront, guys. Stop the excuse facades!
Respectfully,
-Sean
You know what's funny? Every time (and I mean EVERY time) one of my teams starts bumping up against the 23 rule and complains about how unfair it is, I am able to point out to them how dominant they have been in their division. Most of the time it is for multiple years, but sometimes a new team over-handicaps themselves from the start. I can look at division standings over the course of five or six sessions (without knowing a thing about skill levels of the players on any of the teams) and point out which teams will or do have trouble with that rule. Coincidence? Again, believe what you will, I know I'm doing it right and I don't need your approval.