1:36 mark.
Do you have to have two hands on the cue when the cue ball is struck? If so, then what about when a mechanical bridge is being used?
I hope someone can explain what went on here.
Why didn't Melling take ball-in-hand then? He seemed to be amused and confused about the whole ordeal and by his body language didn't agree with whatever the ruling was.at 1:36 melling broke dry? at the copied timestamp williams kicked into the wrong suite..
No. At 1:35:35 Mark Williams broke dry. Melling potted a solid and played a safe. Williams played a kick one-handed and hit the ball and a rail. The ref called a foul on Williams. Both players were flabbergasted. A head ref came over and apparently showed them the rule on his phone. Chris took the cue ball in position nullifying the call.at 1:36 melling broke dry? at the copied timestamp williams kicked into the wrong suite..
I guess one-armed players are not allowed to play in this tournament?I guess you have to be holding the front of the stick with your hand or a bridge head. Resting it on the rail uncontrolled seems to be a foul.
I've always liked Melling. After seeing him do this I have an even deeper respect for him. Especially since it was a close match that was nearing its end.Chris took the cue ball in position nullifying the call.
No. At 1:35:35 Mark Williams broke dry. Melling potted a solid and played a safe. Williams played a kick one-handed and hit the ball and a rail. The ref called a foul on Williams. Both players were flabbergasted. A head ref came over and apparently showed them the rule on his phone. Chris took the cue ball in position nullifying the call.
I guess you have to be holding the front of the stick with your hand or a bridge head. Resting it on the rail uncontrolled seems to be a foul.
No. At 1:35:35 Mark Williams broke dry. Melling potted a solid and played a safe. Williams played a kick one-handed and hit the ball and a rail. The ref called a foul on Williams. Both players were flabbergasted. A head ref came over and apparently showed them the rule on his phone. Chris took the cue ball in position nullifying the call.
I guess you have to be holding the front of the stick with your hand or a bridge head. Resting it on the rail uncontrolled seems to be a foul.
There was recently a revision of heyball rules so maybe the rules writer got overly excited and energetic and added a few bells and whistles. Sometimes rules writers do that. It takes time for the bad rules to bump up against reality.That makes 0 sense but a good job by the ref being familiar with it. If anything, I would have thought you could have an "unsportsmanlike conduct" foul due to taunting and disrespecting the other player by shooting a silly shot. How can you have a rule about how to make a bridge without external equipment? What if you need to shoot over a ball and decide to use an air bridge instead of a rake?
There was recently a revision of heyball rules so maybe the rules writer got overly excited and energetic and added a few bells and whistles. Sometimes rules writers do that. It takes time for the bad rules to bump up against reality.
Matchroom's solution for soft breaking is, "You gotta hit'em hard." The 3-point rule has the advantage that it is objective, but I agree that it is flawed in other ways.I am still waiting for the "3 point" break rule to die, speaking of bad rules. That is a rule that causes more issues than it tries to solve.
We’ve seen a lot of that by the rules makers here as well. Let me count the ways!There was recently a revision of heyball rules so maybe the rules writer got overly excited and energetic and added a few bells and whistles. Sometimes rules writers do that. It takes time for the bad rules to bump up against reality.
Well, I happened to have a copy of the current Heyball rules that I had forgotten about... They appear to be largely a rewrite of the WPA rules. Under fouls we see:There was recently a revision of Heyball rules ...
That could/would actually be called a foul under WPA "pool" rules, because the player is not trying to win. Unsportsmanlike conduct.I've always liked Melling. After seeing him do this I have an even deeper respect for him. Especially since it was a close match that was nearing its end.
That's true. Melling was essentially saying, "I don't want to play by your stupid rules." But fouling by not trying your best to win is not explicitly a rule in the WPA rules so far as I know.That could/would actually be called a foul under WPA "pool" rules, because the player is not trying to win. Unsportsmanlike conduct.
as well it should be!Resting it on the rail uncontrolled seems to be a foul.
You mean like this? At least he seems to be using both hands. Four hooves on the floor but no foot.as well it should be!
if we let these anarchists do just
whatever they want the sport will
fall into meaningless ill-repute
Mark Williams does a lot of things that few other players do. After winning the World Snooker Championship (about $600k prize) he went to the press conference naked. You can look it up and there is (or was) video.I shoot one handed shots often as I have as much confidence with the one handed shots as when I use a bridge
For the life of me I can't figure out why he did it?