Hmm... so shooting soft and kissing the CB to OB is still a foul?
I never thought about this but it came up when I was thinking about a game. If the object ball is on a rail, does it count as a legal shot if the cue ball hits it and the cue ball does not hit a rail?
On every shot, some ball must be driven to a rail after the cue ball contacts an object ball. To understand this rule, you need to know the definition of "driven to a rail." Here it is, copied from the WPA website:I never thought about this but it came up when I was thinking about a game. If the object ball is on a rail, does it count as a legal shot if the cue ball hits it and the cue ball does not hit a rail?
8.4 Driven to a Rail
A ball is said to be driven to a rail if it is not touching that rail and then touches that rail. A ball touching at the start of a shot (said to be “frozen” to the rail) is not considered driven to that rail unless it leaves the rail and returns. A ball that is pocketed or driven off the table is also considered to have been driven to a rail. A ball is assumed not to be frozen to any rail unless it is declared frozen by the referee, the shooter, or the opponent. See also Regulation 27, Calling Frozen Balls.
If you understand this definition, then you will probably be able to come up with a scenario in which the only rail contact is by the frozen object ball to the rail it is frozen to prior to the shot and yet the shot is legal.
According to high-speed videos, if an object ball is frozen on the cushion, and the cue ball is straight out from the object ball, and the cue ball is shot straight at the object ball, the object ball does not leave the cushion and return. (On the other hand, if the object ball is a ball off the cushion, and you shoot straight at it, you can get it to contact the cushion twice.)That's a situation that I assumed Ed. That if I kiss the ball, there is a minuscule amount of movement that bounces the OB off the table, into the CB, and then both move forward to rest on the rail, Thus Legal. but it's a risky argument haha
Shooter must contact the OB and either the cue ball hit a rail or the OB hit another rail.
As has been pointed out below, the OB doesn't have to hit another rail; it can return to the same rail. I seem to recall that hitting another rail was a requirement in some ruleset, but I don't remember in which ruleset or if it's still that way.
pj
chgo
As I tried to point out above, this has been looked for with high-speed video and it is not seen. Physics also says it is unlikely to happen.I may be wrong, but if an OB is frozen to a rail, you can hit it full on with a little bit of draw, cause it to bounce off the rail and kiss the CB sending back to the same rail and it's a good hit. ..
dabarbr:Me:
...I seem to recall that hitting another rail was a requirement in some ruleset, but I don't remember in which ruleset or if it's still that way.
What you're thinking about may be a rule for straight pool that allows just a certrain amount of safes on the same rail. After that, one of the two balls must hit a different rail. I think it's a little known rule or maybe just used by certain tournaments. Any straight pool players know for sure?
Yes. In the WPA (and BCA) rules until the 2008 revision, if you had an object ball frozen to one point of the side pocket and you shot it more or less straight into the point and it rattled back and forth in the side pocket jaws several times and came to a rest in the jaws without dropping, it would be "no rail" (assuming the cue ball had not hit some cushion after the contact).As has been pointed out below, the OB doesn't have to hit another rail; it can return to the same rail. I seem to recall that hitting another rail was a requirement in some ruleset, but I don't remember in which ruleset or if it's still that way.
pj
chgo
The whole point of the frozen ball rule is to prevent an infinite series of little tippy-tap safeties on the same ball, when no one wants to try a longer safe or a bank. It seems to me that the stalemate rule could be used for a frozen ball, and you don't have to worry about whether a ball is frozen or not. One say to say that is: "Any ball close to the cushion is considered not quite frozen." What would it hurt? The next chance for a revision of this rule is 2013.