Mmmmmmmmm
You get a greenie for that one. Very interesting.
Herkybird said:
You get a greenie for that one. Very interesting.
Herkybird said:
Cuebacca said:If there's ever a Jacksonville Part II, maybe this shot should be tested as an extreme case of the frozen combo contact time:
I do like the simplicity of being able to shoot through a frozen ball, but I'm afraid that the above test just might hurt the cause a little bit.![]()
I couldn't find the "technical" section on AZbtv.com. However, I'm satisfied that shooting into a ball frozen to the cueball does not result in a double hit. I use the shot advantageously when it presents itself.Bob Jewett said:It's on the Jacksonville Tape, somewhere. The Jacksonville Tape is now up on the AZBTV www.azbtv.com under the "technical" section. I'm not sure at what time the frozen ball shots occur. I'll briefly summarize the conclusions from the tape and simple analysis...
gulfportdoc said:I couldn't find the "technical" section on AZbtv.com. However, I'm satisfied that shooting into a ball frozen to the cueball does not result in a double hit. I use the shot advantageously when it presents itself.
What's interesting, though, is the old trick shot with two balls frozen perpendicular to the rail a few inches from the hole. The shooter would literally push into the OB with the CB, causing the OB to move laterally into the pocket. As I recall the cuetip stays on the CB for an extended time. So I'm wondering if that would be a legal shot? I suppose that would be a special "trap shot" rule, since the CB may actually smear across the CB-- in effect causing a double hit.
Doc
gulfportdoc said:I couldn't find the "technical" section on AZbtv.com. However, I'm satisfied that shooting into a ball frozen to the cueball does not result in a double hit. I use the shot advantageously when it presents itself.
What's interesting, though, is the old trick shot with two balls frozen perpendicular to the rail a few inches from the hole. The shooter would literally push into the OB with the CB, causing the OB to move laterally into the pocket. As I recall the cuetip stays on the CB for an extended time. So I'm wondering if that would be a legal shot? I suppose that would be a special "trap shot" rule, since the CB may actually smear across the CB-- in effect causing a double hit.
Doc
jay helfert said:According to the "rules" you can do just about
anything with a frozen ball, even eat it if you like.![]()
gulfportdoc:
...the old trick shot with two balls frozen perpendicular to the rail a few inches from the hole. The shooter would literally push into the OB with the CB, causing the OB to move laterally into the pocket. As I recall the cuetip stays on the CB for an extended time. So I'm wondering if that would be a legal shot?
Jay:
According to the "rules" you can do just about anything with a frozen ball, even eat it if you like.
Mike Mason:
"His cue ball was almost hugging the side rail, and the six ball almost kissing the cue ball, but lined up straight to the corner pocket across the table. Lombard jacks up the butt of his cue and slams the cue ball so that it knocks the six ball to the corner pocket, and stops on a dime about a foot and a half away. Not a cannon, but at least a bazooka."
This is a shot that I played in the finals of a tournament at hill-hill. My opponent...jumped out of his chair and called foul. I was houseman at the time...and the owner, me, and my opponent had a quiet discussion...and the owner said that he thought the shot was legal but that he would rule against me because I was his houseman and it would look bad if he ruled in my favor...and awarded me the same amount of money as first place...and then announced to the crowd that it was a foul and that my opponent had just won the tournament...well he actually had to sink the 9-ball that was hanging in the side pocket.
fan-tum:
on an accustat tape Ray martin played that same shot, but his cue ball traveled the length of the table before backspin took effect and the cb stopped. The commentator Freddy Bentivegna said "I hope they (BCA ?)dont't take that shot away because I've learned how to control it. It's a tasty shot".
His cb and ob were frozen or nearly so, and he jacked up 45 degrees.
Referee allowed it.
If there's wide disagreement on this shot, the BCA should adopt the snooker ruling.
Hey don't make me quote from WONDERBOYS II again lol...
In my quote above...most of the question marks are really quotation marks...MM
This is the sort of extended contact time that the push shot rule is intended to prevent.gulfportdoc said:... What's interesting, though, is the old trick shot with two balls frozen perpendicular to the rail a few inches from the hole. The shooter would literally push into the OB with the CB, causing the OB to move laterally into the pocket. As I recall the cuetip stays on the CB for an extended time. So I'm wondering if that would be a legal shot? ...
When the page starts up for me, I see nine thumbnails of various sorts of videos, including "One Pocket" and "Artistic Pool." There is a "move right" arrow below those thumbnails. If you click on the "move right" arrow, you will see some more topics including "Technical."gulfportdoc said:I couldn't find the "technical" section on AZbtv.com. ...
Patrick Johnson said:LOL. How long did it take you to line all those balls up so straight?
I wonder what would happen with this shot. I think the problem would be double hitting the CB because it would move too slowly to get out of the way.
But I don't think this would reasonably hurt the case for legally shooting through a frozen combo because any more than one or two OBs frozen in a straight line with the CB is just too unlikely to matter, and a double hit would probably be easy to see.
pj
chgo
jay helfert said:This shot and the one where the cue ball and object ball are very close together has plagued tournament officials for decades. I do not like what the BCA has done in their current rules, allowing a player to shoot directly through two frozen balls. This is contrary to everything I learned in well over 30 years of playing pool and officiating. Plain and simple, the above is a bad shot and should be ruled as such.
The BCA rules committee took the easy way out on this one and did their best to make it easier for less skilled officials to make a call. JMHO![]()
My point of view is that if the balls are frozen or near frozen, extreme care must be used in executing any shot here. I would NOT allow "pushing" or shooting directly through the balls. Either an elevated cue stroke must be used or you must shoot at an angle into the object ball.
Of course those are "Jay's" rules now. And the ones we used for about 50 years before the BCA mucked it up!