Pretty cool having a hobby that shows a profit. £500,000 minus expenses still must be a little profit there.Ronnie over the last 3 to 4 years has made this a hobby
A few years ago Steve Davis started a discussion about breaking off being a huge disadvantage, since the players were getting better and better with their long pots.Does the player who breaks off in snooker (the breaker or "breaker-off" or "break-offer") have an advantage in snooker (i.e., win the frame more frequently than lose it) as he does in most pool games?
In this year's World Championship Finals, the opening breaker won 15 of the 31 frames (9 of 16 for O'Sullivan and 6 of 15 for Trump). But that, of course, is quite a small sample. Is it close to 50/50 for the top pros more generally?
I found a blog post from 6 years ago where someone looked at all of the World Championship Finals from 2000 through 2016. He found that the player who broke off won about 50.2% of the frames. That's pretty good evidence that it's not a significant advantage to break off, at least for the top guys. But, interestingly, 14 of the 17 Championship winners in those years broke off in the opening frame of the Finals. However, apparently only 3 of those Finals went to a decider (hill/hill). https://www.snookerisland.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=468&t=6768#p437259
Wasn't it Mark Williams who did that?A few years ago Steve Davis started a discussion about breaking off being a huge disadvantage, since the players were getting better and better with their long pots.
He even started to just roll the cueball to the back of the pack instead of breaking off in the traditional way.
Anyway, nobody else really jumped on to that train and it was very unpopular with the fans too, since it was very boring to watch.
Wasn't it Mark Williams who did that?
I think, I have seen Davis playing a roll up break off in the premier league back in ...2005, maybe?Wasn't it Mark Williams who did that?
So in a normal casual match between ordinary people, who is responsible for continuously spotting the colored balls? The shooter or the opponent? I am assuming there aren't just random snooker refs hanging out all over Europe just waiting for a match to materialize.
Also, for those who believe snooker will catch on in the US, what/how do you account for the space issue. If pool halls and bars are trading 9 ft. pool tables for 7 footers in order to increase profitability, what type of establishments would reverse that trend and go to the much larger snooker tables. I'm not gonna do the math, but I imagine it would take a very large venue to have 10 or so snooker tables.
Random questions I know, but genuinely curious.
Alex Higgins did it now and again, but to be fair that was probably Alex being Alex and nothing to do with strategy.Mark has done it before. Maybe he got inspiration from Steve?
...and this is one of the great things about the game in an informal setting. Both players are dancing around each other all the time. Bottom line - it's a game, and a social one.The opponent is responsible for spotting the balls and counting your break.
Drug dealers are able to work with grams ,ounces,kilo's,pounds and count money. Where there is a will there is a way.I think the actual math of counting points during a break is a big barrier in our pool halls as well. But maybe there is an app for it.
Alex Higgins did it now and again, but to be fair that was probably Alex being Alex and nothing to do with strategy.
Steve Davis might well be correct with his analysis but I doubt it's any more than a marginal advantage.