lfigueroa said:
Bob, over on your old stomping grounds, in a thread titled "More Stuff to Chew On," Ray has come up with a really novel break shot. There is some question among the group as to whether you'd bless it as legal or not, as a starting break shot for your 14.1 Challenge.
Here's the shot:
http://cuetable.com/P/?@3AHfp4BCpA3...JFSe4KEMO3LBKO3MDvO4NBal3OBJl4PLNE3eFSe3eFSd@
So, what say you?
Lou Figueroa
One upon a time, pre 1970s, the College Union Tournaments played
a game called something lile 'Keyshot Pocket Billiards'
It was sort of a modified version of 14.1 where each player shot
10 racks, with a limit of 10 balls pocketed per rack.
Add up all the balls made for each player to determine the winner
of each match - elimination brackets till they got down to the last two
who then played a 'real' game of straight pool to determine the
school champ.
Why does this matter, you may well be asking by now?
Well the Key Shot part was a similar idea to your diagram, a dead
ball to open each rack.
IIRC - the rear corner balls were pulled off a 15 ball rack and
set up frozen on the center spot - player shot from behind the
headstring - not too tough to pocket a ball in the side and drive the
other one into the head ball in the rack at near-warp speed,
while killing the CB near center table.
IMHO this is a way for intermediate 9 ballers to transition into 14.1.
At least, as a start for running strings of balls on an open table
where sequence is optional.
IIUC - sometime in the mid 60s the Unions dropped the keyshot
version and just played a Straight Pool Tournament.
I think that was the case when Mr Jewett competed
Dale<Union Champ in an earlier life...much earlier>