Joey, this has happened to me in tournaments as well. The guy played dumb (or maybe he wasn't playing...) and apologized. I would also like to see this be loss of game.
Mika did it against SVB in a tournament match. SVB was awarded BIH.
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I saw that match...it was in Japan.....Mika missed a six-ball altogether and the cue ball
was going to break up the 7/ 8 whick were stuck on a ral together....
...Shane said something...but I don't think they called a ref....
To me, the least penalty should be loss of game....
...getting BIH is NOT a penalty....the other player already has that.
The second time should be disqualification
It's no different from scrambling the balls with your hand or picking them up and placing them where you want. Whether it was deliberate or not it unfairly changes the game and the penalty needs to restore the player who was screwed over by it. The only way to do that is loss of game for the fouler.
I saw that match...it was in Japan.....Mika missed a six-ball altogether and the cue ball
was going to break up the 7/ 8 whick were stuck on a ral together....
...Shane said something...but I don't think they called a ref....
To me, the least penalty should be loss of game....
...getting BIH is NOT a penalty....the other player already has that.
The second time should be disqualification
I agree with those that say intentionally interfering with a moving cue ball should be loss of game. The offender already knows he is giving up BIH and by altering the path off the moving cue ball he is very possibly changing the outcome of the game. I wouldnt think it would be hard to enforce, anyone who intentionally alters the path of a moving cue ball loses, it would be no different than an end of game situation where everyone waits until cue ball stops until touching it, even if its in the center of the table. People that grab a moving cue ball know exactly what they are doing.
In traditional 9 ball pool tournaments around the U.S., what penalty is assigned to the player who purposefully picks up a cue ball before it stops rolling (to keep it from hitting other balls)?
In most bars I used to play in it's loss of right index finger.
It's not quite the same thing but it reminded me of this situation. Should Niels have gotten a foul for this? I don't think so, but you could imagine a situation where that cue ball was traveling faster and had a chance of scratching.
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