I live in Ontario, Canada...In what state do you play?
Not looking for a response like, "inebriated", either lol.
Is there such a thing as a foreigner on the internet...?..., lolHe's a foreigner. They have provinces there.
I live in Ontario, Canada...In what state do you play?
Not looking for a response like, "inebriated", either lol.
Is there such a thing as a foreigner on the internet...?..., lolHe's a foreigner. They have provinces there.
Boomers made you possible.
There was Gene from I think Family Billiards on Geary --lowleft on the RSB forum. A pretty solid player might be 80 or 90. A top dog like Bryce Avila might be 130. I think this was Bob Jewett's approach, but I might be conflating memories...There was another rating system years ago in NorCal USPPA. Gene Stary ran it, he’s well known and a lot of people here remember him and know that system he had.
This was mid 80’s to early 90’s. They would mail a rating sheet to the member pool rooms and it would have a list of the active players and their rating next to their name. The range was 20-200 as I recall. 20 was someone who couldn’t run 2 balls, 200 was Mike Segal. 100 was a solid player.
Anyways about once a year everyone would get a 5-10% haircut as there was inflation built into the rating system. Often times rating systems have inflation.
That’s my guess, doesn’t matter if everyone gets the same haircut. It’s all the same, it’s just a number not like everyone got worse at pool.
Fatboy<———unrated
I live in Ontario, Canada...
Is there such a thing as a foreigner on the internet...?..., lol
Lamest bragging?This is the lamest bragging I've ever seen, congratulations. You're #1 on Annoying Rate for sure
Your "main question" was overshadowed by your conspiracy theories, why cast aspersions when you can ask "did any big events get added to Fargo in the past week?"
Gene died before Al Gore invented the internetThere was Gene from I think Family Billiards on Geary --lowleft on the RSB forum. A pretty solid player might be 80 or 90. A top dog like Bryce Avila might be 130. I think this was Bob Jewett's approach, but I might be conflating memories...
Gene Stary lived near Sacramento. The USPPA was invented by a friend of Gene Stary's and Stary developed it. It was based on weekly nine ball tournaments at member rooms. Payouts were at each small tournament. It required inning-by-inning score sheets and your rating was determined by a formula that I think mostly counted offensive innings required to win a game. The USPPA ran very large member tournaments with added money at the same time as the Sands Reno pro tournaments. For a while John Lewis (later of the BCA and then of the ACS) was travelling the country to get new rooms into the system. Players ratings were roughly 20 to 180.There was Gene from I think Family Billiards on Geary --lowleft on the RSB forum. A pretty solid player might be 80 or 90. A top dog like Bryce Avila might be 130. I think this was Bob Jewett's approach, but I might be conflating memories...
Thanks Bob for the full accurate report.Gene Stary lived near Sacramento. The USPPA was invented by a friend of Gene Stary's and Stary developed it. It was based on weekly nine ball tournaments at member rooms. Payouts were at each small tournament. It required inning-by-inning score sheets and your rating was determined by a formula that I think mostly counted offensive innings required to win a game. The USPPA ran very large member tournaments with added money at the same time as the Sands Reno pro tournaments. For a while John Lewis (later of the BCA and then of the ACS) was travelling the country to get new rooms into the system. Players ratings were roughly 20 to 180.
I felt that an Elo-like system would be simpler and fairer, so I invented the NPL system which just counted your wins and losses. Win and go up, lose and go down. A tournament director in SF named Gene Miller (the other Gene) ran the NPL in California and a few other locations. I set the log multiplier so that 30 rating points was a doubling of ability as opposed to the 100 in FargoRate. That allowed the NPL ratings to be roughly the same as the USPPA ratings and they more or less equal at 100.
Tony Annigoni took over the USPPA after Gene Stary's death. It disappeared after the disastrous USPPA tournament at the Peppermill in Reno where most of the players didn't get paid.
Gene Miller is still running tournaments in San Francisco, but I don't think the NPL system is active.
Lamest bragging?
You drink poison every time I post and somehow expect I will get ill from it.
You need a life son.
You're right. I remember guys like John Schmidt, Dave Piona, and Amar Kang were all in the 140-150 range.There was Gene from I think Family Billiards on Geary --lowleft on the RSB forum. A pretty solid player might be 80 or 90. A top dog like Bryce Avila might be 130. I think this was Bob Jewett's approach, but I might be conflating memories...
I'm pretty sure (although never 100%) that disaster tournament was at the Grand Sierra (formerly Hilton). I'm not old enough to remember any tournaments at the Peppermill. If memory serves, Jeff Gregory won that one.Gene Stary lived near Sacramento. The USPPA was invented by a friend of Gene Stary's and Stary developed it. It was based on weekly nine ball tournaments at member rooms. Payouts were at each small tournament. It required inning-by-inning score sheets and your rating was determined by a formula that I think mostly counted offensive innings required to win a game. The USPPA ran very large member tournaments with added money at the same time as the Sands Reno pro tournaments. For a while John Lewis (later of the BCA and then of the ACS) was travelling the country to get new rooms into the system. Players ratings were roughly 20 to 180.
I felt that an Elo-like system would be simpler and fairer, so I invented the NPL system which just counted your wins and losses. Win and go up, lose and go down. A tournament director in SF named Gene Miller (the other Gene) ran the NPL in California and a few other locations. I set the log multiplier so that 30 rating points was a doubling of ability as opposed to the 100 in FargoRate. That allowed the NPL ratings to be roughly the same as the USPPA ratings and they were more or less equal at 100.
Tony Annigoni took over the USPPA after Gene Stary's death. It disappeared after the disastrous USPPA tournament at the Peppermill in Reno where most of the players didn't get paid.
Gene Miller is still running tournaments in San Francisco, but I don't think the NPL system is active.
Here is an announcement of the tournament:I'm pretty sure (although never 100%) that disaster tournament was at the Grand Sierra (formerly Hilton). I'm not old enough to remember any tournaments at the Peppermill. If memory serves, Jeff Gregory won that one.
Dave Piona was 110 in 86-87 by 1990 he was 140. Amar & Schmit weren’t around when the numbers were lower.You're right. I remember guys like John Schmidt, Dave Piona, and Amar Kang were all in the 140-150 range.
I wasn't around it until about '97.Dave Piona was 110 in 86-87 by 1990 he was 140. Amar & Schmit weren’t around when the numbers were lower.
In 86 Kim was 140-145 in Modesto as a reference. Sacramento and Modesto had very similar numbers and were comparable.
That was the “inflation” in the rating system. After Gene passed the numbers went off the rails.
I remember this vividly
Best
Fatboy
You are correct,I wasn't around it until about '97.