Just a minor rant here; actually more of an observation than a rant. A little backround first - the league I play in is a barbox 8 ball league. It's take what you make on the break, race to your handicap, and loser breaks. All the rest of the rules are typical league 8 ball league rules (BIH, call pocket, etc.).
My observation may be explained simply as a persons auto-reflex of blame for losing, but let's see what you think. I've noticed that almost every time a lower handicap player beats a higher handicapped one, there is a question of whether the winner is undercapped.....
I have a player on my team that won hill/hill; my buddy is a 4 and his opponent a 5. My 4 played well, as did the opponent. The game before the hill my 4 made a VERY nice out....this was the game in question really, since the statement was then uttered - "you're a 4, huh?" I knew then my 4 would win. I was right, the 5 dogged the ball prior to the 8 ball, and my teammate won.
Anyway, if these 2 same players played the same race (5 to 4) over and over, I truly think it'd be REALLY close to a 50/50 outcome. If my 4 were raised to a 5, and they played over and over that way....his opponent would have a distinct advantage. Isn't that what handicaps are supposed to do - make the race fair? Yet it seems whenever a better player loses giving up a spot, then the one getting spotted shouldn't be spotted anymore...lol. I don't get it.
btw, the ratings are far from APA ratings, since we have former APA 7s in 8 ball that rate as 5s, 6s, 7s, and an 8. 4s in this league I'd say are typical 5s and weaker 6s in APA - meaning they still can run out a rack that has no REAL problems in it. My 4 did get out in the 2nd to last game in a situation he might only do 25-30% of the time (and one his opponent may be able to pull off 50-60% of the time....wasn't easy, probably should have played safe somewhere).
I think someone's handicap rating has nothing to do with whether or not he/she can pull off a certain shot, or get out of a tough situation, but rather the percentage of the time they can pull that off, and even the decision making skills on whether or not they should try to.....What say you?
My observation may be explained simply as a persons auto-reflex of blame for losing, but let's see what you think. I've noticed that almost every time a lower handicap player beats a higher handicapped one, there is a question of whether the winner is undercapped.....
I have a player on my team that won hill/hill; my buddy is a 4 and his opponent a 5. My 4 played well, as did the opponent. The game before the hill my 4 made a VERY nice out....this was the game in question really, since the statement was then uttered - "you're a 4, huh?" I knew then my 4 would win. I was right, the 5 dogged the ball prior to the 8 ball, and my teammate won.
Anyway, if these 2 same players played the same race (5 to 4) over and over, I truly think it'd be REALLY close to a 50/50 outcome. If my 4 were raised to a 5, and they played over and over that way....his opponent would have a distinct advantage. Isn't that what handicaps are supposed to do - make the race fair? Yet it seems whenever a better player loses giving up a spot, then the one getting spotted shouldn't be spotted anymore...lol. I don't get it.
btw, the ratings are far from APA ratings, since we have former APA 7s in 8 ball that rate as 5s, 6s, 7s, and an 8. 4s in this league I'd say are typical 5s and weaker 6s in APA - meaning they still can run out a rack that has no REAL problems in it. My 4 did get out in the 2nd to last game in a situation he might only do 25-30% of the time (and one his opponent may be able to pull off 50-60% of the time....wasn't easy, probably should have played safe somewhere).
I think someone's handicap rating has nothing to do with whether or not he/she can pull off a certain shot, or get out of a tough situation, but rather the percentage of the time they can pull that off, and even the decision making skills on whether or not they should try to.....What say you?