This situation came up the other day and my opponent and I disagreed (in a friendly way) about the legality of a shot I made. Neither of us have been able to substantiate our positions in the rules (WPA) so I thought I'd ask here.
We were playing straight pool, though I don't think that matters in this case. My opponent attempts a thin hit safe off the pack and misses the ball, putting him on one foul. The cue ball comes to rest deep inside the far corner pocket, with a view of all balls totally obstructed by the side of the pocket.
On my turn I play an intentional foul by hitting the cue ball into the side facing of the pocket. It was not touching the facing before I played my shot, just about 1/4" away. I attempt to hit the ball directly into the facing, intending to leave it there. I touch the ball with my tip and the cue ball hits the facing and then hits the tip of my cue for a double hit.
My opponent maintains that this shot is a "trap" and is unsportsmanlike conduct, though he agreed that I wasn't intending to do a "trap" but that the double hit made it one.
I maintain that I did nothing wrong. I took an intentional foul, by not hitting a ball, and inadvertantly made another foul with the double hit, but it's still just a foul and it's his turn, on one foul, stuck in the pocket with no view of the balls.
I did not jam the ball into the facing and hold it there by keeping my cue up against the ball, but the double hit foul caused a siilar effect, though the ball came to rest a tiny bit off the facing.
This seems to me very much like taking an intentional foul when your oppponent has left you buried in the pack up against multiple balls. You might take an intentional foul by hitting into the cue ball intending to move it a minimal amount, but not holding your tip on the ball. This would just be a normal foul. Is this different from the situation described above?
What do you experts think?
We were playing straight pool, though I don't think that matters in this case. My opponent attempts a thin hit safe off the pack and misses the ball, putting him on one foul. The cue ball comes to rest deep inside the far corner pocket, with a view of all balls totally obstructed by the side of the pocket.
On my turn I play an intentional foul by hitting the cue ball into the side facing of the pocket. It was not touching the facing before I played my shot, just about 1/4" away. I attempt to hit the ball directly into the facing, intending to leave it there. I touch the ball with my tip and the cue ball hits the facing and then hits the tip of my cue for a double hit.
My opponent maintains that this shot is a "trap" and is unsportsmanlike conduct, though he agreed that I wasn't intending to do a "trap" but that the double hit made it one.
I maintain that I did nothing wrong. I took an intentional foul, by not hitting a ball, and inadvertantly made another foul with the double hit, but it's still just a foul and it's his turn, on one foul, stuck in the pocket with no view of the balls.
I did not jam the ball into the facing and hold it there by keeping my cue up against the ball, but the double hit foul caused a siilar effect, though the ball came to rest a tiny bit off the facing.
This seems to me very much like taking an intentional foul when your oppponent has left you buried in the pack up against multiple balls. You might take an intentional foul by hitting into the cue ball intending to move it a minimal amount, but not holding your tip on the ball. This would just be a normal foul. Is this different from the situation described above?
What do you experts think?