Wow, by some of the posts in here, there must be fistfights going on all over the country in pool halls, every time there is a disagreement on a hit. lol
Wow, by some of the posts in here, there must be fistfights going on all over the country in pool halls, every time there is a disagreement on a hit. lol
You're in a local tournament for small money....less than $200 with BCA rules.
You're playing someone you've played many times before and it has always been very competitive....with subtle undertones of annomosity on his part.
You take a shot and pocket a ball.
You walk around the table for 20-30 seconds sizing up the next shot and before you can hit the next shot, your opponent asks if you double tapped the cue ball on the previous shot. You inform him that you did not and then he aggressively accuses you of lying and commiting the foul.
You are unaware of any foul but apparently a friend of your opponent told him that you double tapped the cue ball while executing the previous shot. Your opponent apparently did not see a foul but truly believes his friend. His friend is a 20 year old kid whos opinion and/or vision I would not hold as highly reliable.
You had no sensation of a double hit and believe it to be a legal shot but your opponent is convinced you are cheating him and he's making a big scene.
This actually happened to me...I was the shooter.
How would you handle this situation?
tell him stfu or gtfo. the tournaments i have played in only the players in the match or person running the tournament have a say in the match not the bevy of local gomers watching the match. and if you're calling foul on me it had better be when i foul not a year and a half later.
Or you can politely tell him it was a good hit and move on........ seriously why get bent out of shape over something stupid?
Because if he protests -- and he seems to be the protesting type from the OP -- you have to resolve the claim of foul before the next shot is taken. Personally, I think it's a good idea to get the TD involved in situations like this because loud, obnoxious thugs can ruin his event and he will want to know about trouble makers.Or you can politely tell him it was a good hit and move on........ seriously why get bent out of shape over something stupid?
Haha, save it, doesn't impress me in the slightest.
I've seen about five hundred dudes on AZB talk about how at their local pool hall, bones get broken if you do such-and-such... like they're badass mother****s for even playing at such a rough'n'tumble place.
I see a fight once in a blue moon and it's nothing you couldn't shrug off the next day. Maybe I live a sheltered life or maybe the pool halls where I shoot aren't ghetto enough.
In any case, I let my friends know when they're up against one of those sleazy players who you have to watch like a hawk, because they won't call fouls on themselves. My buddy may not be able to act on that info, because of the BCAPL rule Chopstick cited. But they still need to be made aware.
A very intelligent reply.
Certainly a gentlemanly response but not a correct one. Again, we can only assume there is an area ref or TD but if there is, continuing to shoot while a dispute is in progress would, itself, be a foul.
(-:
EagleMan
Because if he protests -- and he seems to be the protesting type from the OP -- you have to resolve the claim of foul before the next shot is taken. Personally, I think it's a good idea to get the TD involved in situations like this because loud, obnoxious thugs can ruin his event and he will want to know about trouble makers.
Nothing wrong with warning your friend before a match to keep a close eye on a player, nothing wrong even to tell him after a rack "Hey I saw that dude foul and not call it, you better watch him for the rest of the set." But to interupt 2 people matching up and call a foul on either player is beyond rude, and beyond out of line, and in Chicago people don't take that sort of stuff lightly.
rrick33 said:I stated that anything's possible, but if it did double tap..I was unaware of it. I assured him that I had no intention of cheating him and if I really believed it had double taped the cue I would have given up the table.
I then offered to re-rack and play the game over if he really thought I was in error.
TheNewSharkster said:Getting the TD involved would be escalating the situation. It could make matters worse. Plus why should you need to wait until the TD has heard both sides of the story before the game continues?
Seriously its as simple as telling the other player that it wasn't a foul.
Actually 'he' has commited a foul by recieving outside assistance even though it was unsolicited. However the rules are a bit vague as to what should actaully happen.
Actually, you're right... While I personally might not care, it's definitely considered rude and I normally don't do it right in the middle of the game. Thinking on it, the times I felt obliged to point it out were always at the end of the rack, not before the very next shot.
This is absolutely the way to do it. Offer to be accommodating. Why escalate it? You can't treat him like he's pulling a move, he may honestly feel like he's the wronged party. Your best bet is to let him know you're not out to cheat him and you're happy to play by the rules.
Seriously?
Between
"Well let's get the TD, we'll get a ruling"
and
"It wasn't a foul." and then you take your next shot...
which do you think is more likely to piss off the other guy?
If you take an attitude like "well ...according to me, there's no foul so I'm gonna keep shooting." then it will NOT go smoothly, the other guy is going to flip out, or get the TD, or just start blatantly making up fouls to call on you, or blatantly fouling himself to "make his point" about non-reffed matches. Waiting for a TD is a small price to pay to prevent all that, even if you know you're in the right.
Why get in a dispute? Unless a 3rd party is asked to watch the shot the call goes to the shooter. In this case the shooter said he didn't foul and nobody was watching the shot. Move on!
Actually the whole purpose of my post was that you shouldn't let tic tac things get you in a angered state. Telling somebody to shut the **** up isn't going to help the situation. You need to stay calm and collected.
I agree that keeping calm is great. But I am not aware of the rule that says that unless a 3rd party is called to watch a shot, the call goes to the shooter.
If there is an area ref or TD...they can be brought into the matter, can gather all "evidence" they think would help and of course, are not required to have seen the purported foul being committed.
WPA/BCA Regulation 6.
Of course, there are LOCAL rules set by the folks running the tournament/pool hall which can and often do trump any of the "standard rule sets." So, the call going to the shooter may well be the rules that you play under.
EagleMan
I am not saying you never need to call the TD over. In this situation it should be done before the shot, not after.
I am guessing that the call goes to the shooter. If that is true it doesn't make any sense to pause the game for a call from a person that didn't see the shot. The shooter said he made a legal hit and a bystander thought it was a foul.
At the end of the day if your opponent is shooting a shot that potentially could result in a double hit you need to get the TD over to watch the shot. Not complain after when a random dude thought it was a foul.