I just watched this interview with Pagulayan and at the question "which is harder pool or poker" Alex responded that are the same because in both game you need skill and luck. This reply can lead a non pool person to think that in pool luck plays the same big factor as in poker ( which I think is clearly bs.). Now, do you really think luck play such a big factor in pool? I'm also interested in a distinction between 9ball/10ball, straight pool and one pocket.
Bye.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFYjH0xMw70 (1:25)
Slh:
Luck can't be legislated out of pool, even with "call shot" (ball/pocket nomination) rules. For example, even in 8-ball, 10-ball, and 14.1 (all three are call-shot games), if you call a ball into a pocket, and it doesn't go directly in, but bobbles-out, goes off a facing rail/cushion, and into the called pocket, that's a legal shot, because the nominated ball went into the nominated pocket. A pure lucky shot, but in the context of the rules, "it went."
In fact, even snooker has its share of luck. Do you know the very first televised 147 at a world's championship -- Cliff Thorburn's milestone 147 at the Snooker World's Championship in 1983 -- started off with an extremely lucky gaff shot?
Check this out:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=vh2NOS9HH-w
(The lucky gaff shot is at 0:45 in this video.)
Cliff's subsequent 147 is a milestone in the annals of snooker, yet it was a lucky fluke that started it off. Should "luck" like this be legislated out of the game? I don't think so.
I would say luck plays a decreasing part in these games, in this specific descending order:
9-ball
8-ball
One Pocket
14.1
Snooker
Bank pool
Notice that I say that luck plays more of a role in one pocket than 14.1, because 14.1 is a consistency game over the long haul. It's entirely possible to gaff a shot in one pocket, and get "lucky" with the leave where your opponent is in serious trouble. Not likely with skilled one pocket opponents, but it does happen. Luck of this nature plays less in 14.1. Yes, it does happen -- the same sort of fluke experienced by Cliff Thorburn in snooker happens in 14.1 as well (with the proviso that 14.1 is a call-shot game, unlike snooker, so that the fluked ball has to go into the called pocket for the player to be able to continue his turn at the table). But because the pocketing in snooker is *so* precise, the precision involved with this kind of rare fluke more than overrides the "call shot" fluke-limiting nature of 14.1.
I think the one game that absolutely, without a doubt, minimizes luck to the barebones minimum, is Bank Pool. I'm a firm believer in that. Reason? It's a call shot game, where the proviso is that the shot must go in CLEAN! The bank has to happen exactly as you call, and cannot carom off of another ball into the pocket, nor combo into another ball, nor take an extra rail to get to the called pocket. If you call, say, "double cross-side," that shot better go across the table twice and into the called side pocket,
cleanly, otherwise you lose your turn at the table. If that ball goes the called two rails, but then clips another ball on the way to the called side pocket, you lose your turn at the table -- even if the ball pockets in the called pocket.
That, to me, is probably the most profound minimization of luck I've ever seen in any pool game. And the best example of pure display of skill and execution in pocketing single shots in pool. Getting position after that perfectly-executed bank is also key to the game as well, for you need to continue your run to be able to have a chance at winning the game.
However, with as much as I love bank pool, my favorite two games are as my avatar says -- 14.1 and one pocket. My avatar pic says it all.
I hope that helps!
-Sean