When my opponent fouls for the 2nd time,i grab bih,and if i dont win the game from here and my opponent gets another shot at the table,i will say as iam heading for my chair,real loud you r on 2!
I disagree with this rule wholeheartedly regarding when you should tell your opponent they are on 2. I don't know if the WPBA changed it back but at one time they changed the rule to that you are allowed to inform your opponent she is on 2 at any time, including immediately after the 2nd foul.
Why should the player who didn't commit the fouls have to keep reminding himself to inform his opponent just before he gets up to shoot that he is on 2? Talk about a distraction! Informing them right when they commit the 2nd foul should be sufficient. Then the burdon of remembering lies where it should --- on the player who committed the first 2 fouls.
I don't want to play head games at the table and I don't want to be accused of playing head games so I hate to say anything to my opponent as they are beginning to prepare for their shot.... BUT, it's a necessary evil.
I think announcing they are on 2 is necessary immediately after the second foul is committed and then again when they next approach the table.
Playing in a tournament with BCA rules. My opponent just committed his 2nd foul. I'm standing at the table with the cue ball in hand ready to hook him again. I say "so that's 2 right?" he says "yep". So I shoot and hook him again. He makes a legal hit and the game continues.
Now it gets interesting. The official running the tournament was observing the match and after the game says "you know technically it would not have been loss of game", because I told him he was on 2 at the wrong time. By rule, I must tell him he is on 2 just before he shoots....not before I shoot.
Now we all have heard OPINIONS on when a person SHOULD tell a player he is on 2, but this is the first time I have been told it is a rule.
Maybe someone else can set up a poll on peoples opinions.....but, does anyone know of a rule in BCA or elsewhere indicating when this should occur, other than after a player commits his second consecutive foul?
Thanks.
Here's how I would look at it, lets say your opponnent just fouled for the second time and you now have BIH with the eight and nine both hanging in the pocket, it would be rude to say anything.
Playing in a tournament with BCA rules. My opponent just committed his 2nd foul. I'm standing at the table with the cue ball in hand ready to hook him again. I say "so that's 2 right?" he says "yep". So I shoot and hook him again. He makes a legal hit and the game continues.
Now it gets interesting. The official running the tournament was observing the match and after the game says "you know technically it would not have been loss of game", because I told him he was on 2 at the wrong time. By rule, I must tell him he is on 2 just before he shoots....not before I shoot.
Now we all have heard OPINIONS on when a person SHOULD tell a player he is on 2, but this is the first time I have been told it is a rule.
Maybe someone else can set up a poll on peoples opinions.....but, does anyone know of a rule in BCA or elsewhere indicating when this should occur, other than after a player commits his second consecutive foul?
Thanks.
It wouldn't be considered rude if you hook-em again
BCA rules state that the "referee" must tell the incoming player they are on 2 fouls, if no referee then the warning falls to the opposing player, ie "referee", so no warning on 2 fouls as the players inning starts, no 3rd foul.
BALONEY! One more "official" who wants to let you know that he knows it all. If you warn him, you warn him, and that's it. Once is enough, I don't care when you do it, as long as it's before he shoots again. Tell that "official" to keep his day job.![]()
Devious comes to mind.............:bow-down:
I'm confused as to what part of my post you were referring to.
Yes, of course in the absence of a referee, the players referee their own match. My point was that I think that telling the player immediately after they commit the 2nd foul should be sufficient. But according to World Standardized rules, which are BCA rules, (not BCAPL rules), you must inform your opponent after your inning and just before they are about to shoot their next inning.
That means in addition to your shooting at the table, you have to keep reminding yourself to tell your opponent that he is on 2 after your turn is over. That is unfair. The burden of remembering should be on the player who committed the fouls. So if you tell them immediately after the 2nd foul, they have to sit in the chair while you are shooting and remind themselves that when they approach the table they will be on 2.
And by the way, if someone is asking a question about a BCAPL rule, please write BCAPL and not BCA. It's been several years since they have not been under the same ownership. People really should know the difference by now.
BALONEY! One more "official" who wants to let you know that he knows it all. If you warn him, you warn him, and that's it. Once is enough, I don't care when you do it, as long as it's before he shoots again. Tell that "official" to keep his day job.![]()
And by the way, if someone is asking a question about a BCAPL rule, please write BCAPL and not BCA. It's been several years since they have not been under the same ownership. People really should know the difference by now.
The BCA contributes to the writing of the WPA rules, but the BCA does not have its own rule set. That's the point of "World Standardized Rules". The intent is one set for everyone who plays pool.This does get confusing at times and it is complicated by the fact that the Billiard Congress doesn't seem to have any of its own written rules. The rules on their website anyway are on WPA letterhead. That's why when it comes to the rules I usually think in terms of BCAPL or WPA. As for APA rules, I wouldn't even consult them for anything outside of actual APA league play (and I don't play APA).
I don't really see the problem. My opponent commits a foul, I take bih, I play safe, I turn around to him as he's approaching the table and say "you have two fouls". Not very complicated although I have always found it really stupid.
I don't know why I have to tell my oponent at all. Shouldn't it be his/her responsibility to understand what is happening in the game and to keep track of how many consecutive fouls they committed? I REALLY hate rules like this.