I love the wooden triangle rack but the outcome is way too dependent on the racker. The mechanics of racking are super complex and the skills/tricks are still widely unknown, especially among amateurs. You probably all know that Joe Tucker released some racking secrets but that was 20 years ago and now his tricks are mostly obsolete and/or just scratching the surface. There's a whole ocean of racking knowledge out there that he didn't address at all. Let me give you a little background so you know where I'm coming from:
At one point in my life I was pretty obsessed with learning how to wire the wingball in 9-ball. I asked a local pro for a lesson and he directed me to Joe Tucker's Racking Secrets DVD. I bought both of his DVDs and studied them to death. However, I still wasn't very good at making the wingball and I would just waste a lot of time trying to rack.
So I ran into Mike Dechaine and I paid him A LOT to teach me everything he knows about racking. He spent a few hours with me and expanded way more on Joe Tucker's material to teach me which balls need to be froze and how certain gaps affect the break. This was really eye opening stuff, but I still could rarely get the balls racked as tight as I needed to. So again, I wasn't satisfied or effectively making wingballs.
Finally, I took one more lesson with another pro, whose name I promised not to ever reveal. He taught me many more things. Mostly helpful tips but some super shady stuff too, like using slight of hand to create an intentional gaps in certain places (which is 100% cheating and I will never use). But most importantly, he taught me HOW to rack. Not just how to read the rack, like the other guys. He physically showed me a racking technique that gets the balls super tight, even on bad tables. It's a pretty cool technique that I use every time now, regardless of whether I'm racking for myself or my opponent.
At this point, I stopped my quest for racking secrets. The shady stuff really turned me off and I felt gross just knowing those tricks. But at least, I knew how to rack super tight, how to read the remaining gaps really well, and some shady things to watch out for. Which was my goal in the first place.
A few years later Dr Dave released a video where he used paper to create gaps in the rack and study the outcomes. No offense to Dave, but based on my limited racking knowledge, this video was missing a ton of info. It's not really Dave's fault, he tried his best but the racking tricks out there are just very rarely shared, even among the pro players. As an example, I remember at one point Mike Dechaine telling Karl Boyes he would teach him how to rack for $10,000. Obviously, he didn't do it lol but it shows how highly sought after this info is.
So, where am I going with this? Well, have you ever heard the expression, "you don't know, what you don't know"? The refs, the promotors, the fans, probably everyone reading this, and 99.99% of the pool community as a whole don't know crap about racking. And they really don't know what they don't know. This is troubling. If you don't fully understand something, it's unlikely that you're going to be able to properly regulate it.
So Matchroom's solution is a neutral racker. But how can a neutral racker, truly be neutral? How much should the netural racker know about rack mechanics? Should the neutral racker be ignorant to rack mechanics and just rack as tight as possible? Or should the neutral racker be extremely skilled in rack mechanics and rack to produce a certain neutral outcome? You need someone who won't rack too well and also won't rack too bad all while keep things fair for both players. How can this be possible? I don't see how. I can show you two equally tight racks, one good, one bad. To the untrained eye, you would have no clue which is which.
So how tight of a rack is acceptable? Which balls need to be frozen for the rack to be acceptable? How tight is too tight? How loose is too loose? Clearly some type of standards or minimum requirements need to be established.
Whether we like to admit it or not, racking is a skill. Just like jumping or anything else in pool. As a pro, I wouldn't want anyone else racking for me. Just like I wouldn't want anyone else shooting a jump shot for me. The outcome is far too important to leave up to a third party who really can't be neutral, no matter how hard they try.
I don't know what the solution here is, but a neutral racker is deeply troubling. No two racks are the same, no two rackers are the same, and no racker is truly neutral. And unfortunately, the people making the rules, don't know, what they don't know.
At one point in my life I was pretty obsessed with learning how to wire the wingball in 9-ball. I asked a local pro for a lesson and he directed me to Joe Tucker's Racking Secrets DVD. I bought both of his DVDs and studied them to death. However, I still wasn't very good at making the wingball and I would just waste a lot of time trying to rack.
So I ran into Mike Dechaine and I paid him A LOT to teach me everything he knows about racking. He spent a few hours with me and expanded way more on Joe Tucker's material to teach me which balls need to be froze and how certain gaps affect the break. This was really eye opening stuff, but I still could rarely get the balls racked as tight as I needed to. So again, I wasn't satisfied or effectively making wingballs.
Finally, I took one more lesson with another pro, whose name I promised not to ever reveal. He taught me many more things. Mostly helpful tips but some super shady stuff too, like using slight of hand to create an intentional gaps in certain places (which is 100% cheating and I will never use). But most importantly, he taught me HOW to rack. Not just how to read the rack, like the other guys. He physically showed me a racking technique that gets the balls super tight, even on bad tables. It's a pretty cool technique that I use every time now, regardless of whether I'm racking for myself or my opponent.
At this point, I stopped my quest for racking secrets. The shady stuff really turned me off and I felt gross just knowing those tricks. But at least, I knew how to rack super tight, how to read the remaining gaps really well, and some shady things to watch out for. Which was my goal in the first place.
A few years later Dr Dave released a video where he used paper to create gaps in the rack and study the outcomes. No offense to Dave, but based on my limited racking knowledge, this video was missing a ton of info. It's not really Dave's fault, he tried his best but the racking tricks out there are just very rarely shared, even among the pro players. As an example, I remember at one point Mike Dechaine telling Karl Boyes he would teach him how to rack for $10,000. Obviously, he didn't do it lol but it shows how highly sought after this info is.
So, where am I going with this? Well, have you ever heard the expression, "you don't know, what you don't know"? The refs, the promotors, the fans, probably everyone reading this, and 99.99% of the pool community as a whole don't know crap about racking. And they really don't know what they don't know. This is troubling. If you don't fully understand something, it's unlikely that you're going to be able to properly regulate it.
So Matchroom's solution is a neutral racker. But how can a neutral racker, truly be neutral? How much should the netural racker know about rack mechanics? Should the neutral racker be ignorant to rack mechanics and just rack as tight as possible? Or should the neutral racker be extremely skilled in rack mechanics and rack to produce a certain neutral outcome? You need someone who won't rack too well and also won't rack too bad all while keep things fair for both players. How can this be possible? I don't see how. I can show you two equally tight racks, one good, one bad. To the untrained eye, you would have no clue which is which.
So how tight of a rack is acceptable? Which balls need to be frozen for the rack to be acceptable? How tight is too tight? How loose is too loose? Clearly some type of standards or minimum requirements need to be established.
Whether we like to admit it or not, racking is a skill. Just like jumping or anything else in pool. As a pro, I wouldn't want anyone else racking for me. Just like I wouldn't want anyone else shooting a jump shot for me. The outcome is far too important to leave up to a third party who really can't be neutral, no matter how hard they try.
I don't know what the solution here is, but a neutral racker is deeply troubling. No two racks are the same, no two rackers are the same, and no racker is truly neutral. And unfortunately, the people making the rules, don't know, what they don't know.