That's not crazy thinking but it doesn't matter.
If it was already acknowledged as being frozen, it is frozen anyone pulling out the you have to call it every time as frozen without it moving is doing exactly that, pulling a move.
If it has been called frozen and it HAS moved (of it's own recognizance) then you need to call it not frozen and give the opponent or ref a chance to inspect and verify that, otherwise, you are just a sheister pulling a move.
Jaden
I agree, and I've seen that myself. I've scratched my head when I see players do that, thinking to myself, "what, like it was going to move on its own?".
But then I was thinking that this might be a throwback to the days when pool halls were "upstairs" (i.e. not on the ground floor in buildings), and the floors were often wooden floors that would creak and give when walked around. Obviously, a wooden floor creaking and giving could be "felt" on the table, and a ball could theoretically "rock" 1mm away from the rail it was previously frozen to, by merely the weight of a person near one side of the table.
Or is that crazy thinking?
-Sean
If it was already acknowledged as being frozen, it is frozen anyone pulling out the you have to call it every time as frozen without it moving is doing exactly that, pulling a move.
If it has been called frozen and it HAS moved (of it's own recognizance) then you need to call it not frozen and give the opponent or ref a chance to inspect and verify that, otherwise, you are just a sheister pulling a move.
Jaden