Bertrand Russell: “The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.”Also, the confidence of the posters is fascinating.
I do not see how the shot could have been totally replicated... getting the balls back in the exact spot, the exact English/stroke, the exact power behind the stroke.
This looks (to me) like one of those football "on the field" calls, where it was just too close to call.
Great point.Is it possible for a player who is under say -- FR 600 -- to be a good referee? Yes, it's possible. Is it likely? No. Thoroughly experiencing the ball interactions for years gives you a baseline understanding, which you can then use to map all the fine details on to.
Do tourney directors have these types of skilled players/referees to draw upon? Nope.
Alexander Hamilton offered that "the masses are asses."Bertrand Russell: “The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.”
As we have ample evidence that the training of referees is inferior on the subject of close hits, we can safely say that many a serious player has far more insight into a subject like this than most referees. While it is not true of most calls that must be made, a serious player likely has far more experience to draw upon in judging situations like this than all but a few referees.
I might go a s low as Fargo 550 here, but I agree with your point in principle that a capable, very experienced player is, on average, more likely to get this call right. In general, a referee will do a much better job on most other types of calls as they are trained to place themselves in the right position to make a call, but the "close hit" scenario is more about knowledge than positioning.
Alexander Hamilton said no such thing. It's not how people talked in the 1790s. Perhaps the 1890s or 1990s ...Alexander Hamilton offered that "the masses are asses."
Alexander Hamilton said no such thing. It's not how people talked in the 1790s. Perhaps the 1890s or 1990s ...
Hamilton did think the masses might not be capable of governing wisely, and he wrote or spoke such sentiments in words more suited to his times. But he also supported the Constitution in the end.
Hamilton wasn't alone. Most of the founders had suspicions of popular democracy. Which is why they created a Republic!
Now back to our regularly scheduled foul controversy ...
To paraphrase what you said. I think he knew it was a foul and hoped he got away with it. Let's be honest here, the ref just was not in the right position to make a definitive call.I think he suspected it could have been a foul, but I don't think he was sure it was a foul. If he was sure, I suspect he would have called a foul or asked for a review. Regardless, all of this is the job of the ref, not the player.
Here's one notable recent example:
Some world-class players being clueless about specific rules, doesn't mean they aren't generally more knowledgeable about what is and what isn't possible on a pool table. Possible fallacious thinking there from the good doctorI think a ref's knowledge of, understanding of, and experience with applying the rules is much more important than playing ability. I have seen countless examples of many world-class players being clueless about certain basic rules (like how to judge double hits and split-hit fouls). Lots of examples can be found here, where the players are sometimes choosing shots that any knowledgeable and experienced referee would know are going to be obvious fouls:
Here's one notable recent example:
Come now, sjm. Citing ... a Wikipedia entry with no attribution to an original source (because there is none). Wikipedia!From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
The Masses Are Asses is a quote attributed to Alexander Hamilton
Also of note is this from https://factually.co/fact-checks/language/ass-word-evolution-donkey-to-insult-a69e33 :
The donkey has long carried literary baggage as a symbol of stubbornness or foolishness; by the medieval period likening a person to a donkey had clear insulting force, and by the 12th–13th centuries "ass" was already used derogatorily to mean a stupid or clumsy person
So, people have been talking this way for almost 1,000 years.
Yes I am one of those culprits..... and the cue ball direction off the first ball was too obvious.Is it possible for a player who is under say -- FR 600 -- to be a good referee? Yes, it's possible. Is it likely? No. Thoroughly experiencing the ball interactions for years gives you a baseline understanding, which you can then use to map all the fine details on to.
Do tourney directors have these types of skilled players/referees to draw upon? Nope.
Thanks for the background. Many quotes are apocryphal. When I visited the battlefield at Bosworth in Leicestershire, England, where Richard III was killed by forces led by Henry VII, the tour guide noted that, despite Shakespeare's reference, Richard III surely never said "my kingdom for a horse." She claimed that the scenario in which Richard III would not have had access to a horse at any point of the battle of Bosworth was unimaginable to any scholar of the period. Other quotes are equally unfathomable. The saying "Nero fiddled while Rome burned" is absurd as it predates the invention of the fiddle.Come now, sjm. Citing ... a Wikipedia entry with no attribution to an original source (because there is none). Wikipedia!
The word 'ass' has been around a long time. No disputing that. But the construction of the phrase "masses are asses" definitely has a modern tinge, not an 18th century one.
I was a Hamilton cheerleader years before Ron Chernow wrote his bio and the play followed. None of his biographers ever referenced this alleged statement. I've read a lot of Hamilton's private and public correspondence. He just did not write or speak like that.
An AI search suggests the phrase was popularized in a poem by Don Seitz and later used in a 1974 play by Pedro Pietri. True? Who knows.
My verdict: The attribution of the phrase to Hamilton was a foul. I don't blame Yapp, though!
I think it's just as likely that he hoped the ref would make the call, which is why he gave her time to do so. I don't have a problem with how Yapp reacted here. He should not be expected to referee the match when someone is there to do so. No other athlete, in any other refereed sport is expected to penalize themselves.To paraphrase what you said. I think he knew it was a foul and hoped he got away with it. Let's be honest here, the ref just was not in the right position to make a definitive call.
That's why when available you have replay. To be honest, at least from many viewers watching. Regardless of the path of the cue ball, it actually looked like a bad hit visually. Just watching from home my wife and I both yelled out that was a bad hit at the same time.
Yes I am one of those culprits..... and the cue ball direction off the first ball was too obvious.
Now if he would of spin cut the 8 ball then it could of easily been a good hit.
If this was an European ref then they are still learning about the larger ball interactions.
Wonder how they'd do in 3 cushion.
No other athlete, in any other refereed sport is expected to penalize themselves.