Win the flip in 8 ball, breaker decides to let his opponent break.
Is it then your opponents break next, or is it yours?
Is it then your opponents break next, or is it yours?
How can the breaker decide to let his opponent break?Win the flip in 8 ball, breaker decides to let his opponent break.
Is it then your opponents break next, or is it yours?
Maybe the rules say the winner of the lag/flip decides who should break?How can the breaker decide to let his opponent break?
They would both be there until closing time with the first rack still intact?
This is a completely different situation.Congrats. This is the first thread of yours where I understood the title.
If your opponent broke the first game, and then your opponent broke the second game as well, would that be alternate breaking?alternate: every other; every second.
If you won the coin toss, and you gave your opponent the opening break, and your opponent broke again the next rack, could your opponent then state, "I started breaking, so I get to break every other rack", therefore I get to break the third rack as well? Do you see where this is headed?
thought the same thing. most of the time i have no clue where he's going.Congrats. This is the first thread of yours where I understood the title.
If your opponent broke the first game, and then your opponent broke the second game as well, would that be alternate breaking?alternate: every other; every second.
If you won the coin toss, and you gave your opponent the opening break, and your opponent broke again the next rack, could your opponent then state, "I started breaking, so I get to break every other rack", therefore I get to break the third rack as well? Do you see where this is headed?
Why in the world did the winner of the flip give up the break? I’ve never in my life seen anyone do that. He should have kept to proper protocol.
Pat did, in fact, sometimes give up the break. He even gave his opponent all the breaks with some excuse such as a sore arm. That was back when the break was not an advantage for a lot of players on the tour. The maximum power style led to a lot of scratches and even cue balls off the table.Why in the world did the winner of the flip give up the break? I’ve never in my life seen anyone do that. He should have kept to proper protocol.
I’ve heard of Pat Fleming claiming the break was a disadvantage overall, but I doubt even he gave it up in his playing days.
AtLarge usually posts that stat for the events he covers. That's not for an individual's season, though.I can't recall seeing the stat I really want to know, somebody's break and win stats. ...
I don't understand that strategy. If it is alternate break, the person who breaks first will also break last at hill-hill.I know of a player that always wants the break in the final game of a hill/hill match.
So he has been known to give up the break in the first game even when winning the flip.
Alternate break, not an even race.I don't understand that strategy. If it is alternate break, the person who breaks first will also break last at hill-hill.
If it is winner (or loser) breaks, either player is roughly equally likely to be breaking at hill-hill.