Well, no! I'm clearly waiting for you to shoot and you are wasting my money and time by taking so long. Make the 9 and I'll rack. I don't concede games. And hurry up.:grin-devilish:Bob, you pull out the rack when I am on the money ball and I will assume you have conceded the game. Every time. 100% :smile:
Well, no! I'm clearly waiting for you to shoot and you are wasting my money and time by taking so long. Make the 9 and I'll rack. I don't concede games. And hurry up.:grin-devilish:
For the record, this happened to me in a tournament and the TD said it was a concession on the part of my (old, sly, sharking) opponent.
How do all of you "sharked" people control everybody else in the poolroom/bar? Doesnt their moving bother you? Do you tell everybody in the room to be quiet and still??? Lmao.
Btw, i am always still and i move out of line of sight of my opponent - even if I'm sitting, I get up and move.
I would much rather my opponent remained seated and still when I'm shooting in his direction.... Btw, i am always still and i move out of line of sight of my opponent - even if I'm sitting, I get up and move....
I was playing a cheap set. I tend to stand up and hold my cue when not shooting. This allows me to move away from an opponents line of sight and holding the cue is just a habit. I tend to shoot and play fast therefore I like holding the cue. In this instance, I placed my cue down when my opponent was on the 8 ball in a 9 ball game. It looked liked an easy shot and I was preparing to rack, therefore, I placed my cue down. He made the ball but got terrible position. Seeing that, I picked my leaning cue up. I was away from his line of sight and was anticipating the opportunity to shoot. Keep in mind my body is still the entire time, and I only picked/lay my cue after his shot. He was a gentleman and told me after the set, what I did was a shark move. I had no sharking intentions as I just enjoy playing. I figured as I was not in his line of sight what I do doesn't matter. Am I in the wrong? I think I play fair and have gambled for a long time in pool. This is the first time I was told that what I did was considered a shark move.
The point is whether the opponent should be moving, not whether the shooter can handle it. The shooter's mental "toughness" should never be tested with anything other than the game.
I gotta admit I'll chalk a little when there are out of line! It always cracks me up a little.
Any real player is going to be completely unaffected by someone grabbing or chalking a cue. I play lots of guys who's whole demeanor changes when they think they are going to get a chance to shoot....no big deal.
The reality is that a shark move is only a shark move when its intentional.
What the hell is wrong with you guys?
Of course, picking up and setting down your cue when your opponent is at the table is
out of line.
..chalking your cue in anticipation of a miss is no class either.
Me doing anything other wetting my finger and sticking it in your ear while you shoot and having an affect your shoot is on you.
Someone placing their stick differently than normal, someone counting quarters or someone even walking away from the table making a pissed at self comment because they left your perfectly should not have any baring on your shoot. If you are player that is that sensitive to every little thing going on around you then you need to toughen up and learn to focus.
With that said I am pretty good about not doing those things but if I do it without thinking and you miss, tough shit.
After reading all of Runout's replies I thought maybe I missed something..... Was this game one of those $2000 entries played in a pool area that had 10 clear feet around the table with designated seating or was it in a public place with people all over the place doing lots of distracting things that have absolutely nothing to do with the shooter or their opponent? If it wasn't the former, then learn to focus because that is the pool game in a vast majority of all situations. Consider it part of your training and STFU.
With that said I am pretty good about not doing those things but if I do it without thinking and you miss, tough shit.
Hypothetical: If you did one of those things unintentionally and your opponent discussed it with you after the set, your response would be tough $hit? That's a terrible attitude. OP is having a moment of introspection and asking for advice and this is your contribution?
I always like it when my opponent is standing ready to shoot with his cue in hand then finally decides to put it down when I have only a ball or 2 left. If my opponent has confidence in me to finish out the rack then I should have just as much confidence in myself. Sharking probably does not bother me much from the 20+ plus years I was racing. In racing everything you or your opponent does is a shark to try to get into your head, not only is sharking acceptable in racing but its expected. Probably the biggest shark move is a guy not sharking you.![]()
Why do you sit still and move out of line of sight of your opponent? I mean, if you're so indignant about people being crybabies and that sharking accusations are so crazy ridiculous?
Who would, and why would, anyone count quarters?
The crafty codger I mentioned earlier had a habit of jingling the change in his pocket while his opponent was shooting.Who would, and why would, anyone count quarters?