Pat Fleming (born 1948) is an American professional pocket billiards player and the founder of Accu-Stats Video Productions. Fleming is the fifty-third inductee into the Billiard Congress of America's Hall of Fame, recognized in the Meritorious Service category on June 12, 2008. In 1983, Fleming invented the Total Performance Average (TPA), a statistical performance analysis system, which is currently the standard metric for professionals.
Career
editAs a child, Fleming had a keen interest in statistics. At the age of nine, when he began learning the game of pocket billiards, he made detailed records of his runs, how much he played, and his practice time. His love of statistics is how he came to create the Accu-Stats score-keeping system, which is still used today to measure the accuracy of pool games.[1]
Pat Fleming played straight pool in the 1970s and early 1980s. He has made many contributions to cue sport, but his most notable contributions is the creation and continuing development of Accu-Stats Video Productions, based in Butler, New Jersey.[2] Accu-Stats Video Productions has videotaped more than 1,000 tournament matches and preserved performances by the world’s greatest pool and billiards players since the mid-1980s.[2] Fleming started the enterprise to document matches for statistical analysis. Now, the Accu-Stats Total Performance Average has become a widely known and recognized measure of pool performance level. Fleming started to offer videotapes of those famous performances and players for sale to players and fans of pocket billiards.[2] Today, the VHS tapes and DVDs are invaluable as entertainment and training tools, along with the most complete video record of two generations of famous pool players.[2]
The BCA Hall of Fame Board held a general election deciding if Allen Hopkins and Fleming would be inducted into the BCA Hall of Fame for their careers and their work in early April 2008.[3] The Board has a total of 52 members. Those members are current Hall of Fame members, billiard industry promoters and historians, and members of the billiard media.[3] As it was voted that Hopkins and Fleming would be inducted, they became the fifty-second and fifty-third industry figures inducted into the BCA Hall of Fame, which was established in 1966.[3] Fleming and Hopkins were inducted to the BCA Hall of Fame during the induction ceremony on June 12, 2008, at the Charlotte Convention Center in Charlotte, North Carolina.[3]
Titles
edit- 1979 Eastern States 14.1 Championship
References
edit- ^ "Welcome to Hopkins, Fleming". Billiards Digest. Retrieved 2009-01-04.
- ^ a b c d "BCA Hall of Fame 2008". Billiard Congress of America. Archived from the original on 2009-05-02. Retrieved 2009-01-04.
- ^ a b c d Colo Broomfield (2008-04-14). "Hopkins, Fleming Elected to BCA Hall of Fame" (PDF). Billiard Congress of America. Retrieved 2009-01-04.[permanent dead link]