acesinc1999, I wasn't implying the frozen ball rule was part of American snooker rules - it isn't. It's part of international rules and it's wacko. 

I'm with Bob Jewett on this one. Snooker is the most traditionally intact game there is so lets not screw with it like happened to one pocket and 14.1 to the point it cannot even get honorable mention on TV anymore.
acesinc1999, I wasn't implying the frozen ball rule was part of American snooker rules - it isn't. It's part of international rules and it's wacko.![]()
Hey Scaramouche,Rule change will not come about from discussions in the snooker forum of an American pool site.
Suggest proposed changes be vetted on the UK snooker forum site.
http://www.thesnookerforum.co.uk/board/
No idea myself either Aceinc, haven't ever seen a game where a ball is removed temporarily. Frozen ball in US games usually refers to a ball on a cushion (rail), this leads to variations of interpretations and rules, such as if that rail is dead even to CB contact when counting rails hit and whether or not the OB is considered to have hit.Thanks, now I get it. When someone says "frozen ball", I assume they are talking about an American version of a game. The "international" version in my mind is touching ball.
As for "wacko", I guess it's just a matter of perspective. I cut my teeth on the BSCC (Billiard and Snooker Control Council) Rules when I was a teenager which really goes back before the professional game was "international"ized, strictly British Empire players in those days (not meaning to offend any of the Republic of Ireland players, they were the exception being so close geographically I suppose. RIP Alex). The touching ball rule was always in the BSCC version and so that was just the way things were so it seems very natural to me. Just a product of our environment for both of us.
Still that rule 11) in the BCA American Snooker Rules sticks in my craw; it appears to be some kind of American Rules version of the "free ball" rule. If I am reading it right, it seems to say that if the fouling player leaves the table with the ball on snookered, then the incoming player can mark the snookering ball, remove it from the table temporarily, take his shot at the ball on, NOT pot it (would be a foul if he did), then replace the ball he removed, and it is the original fouling player's turn next no matter what. Now THAT is wacko and I have never heard of anything even remotely similar in ANY pool, snooker, or billiard game. Am I reading it right? Has anyone EVER played anything like this before? I am utterly perplexed and right now I am assuming I must be reading that incorrectly. Can anyone help me out with this one? pt?
acesinc1999, I wasn't implying the frozen ball rule was part of American snooker rules - it isn't. It's part of international rules and it's wacko.![]()
I've no real problem with international rules but I still think the "touching ball" rule is nutty.
Colin, I just had a flash of inspiration over my morning coffee. It goes like this:
Your original post is suggesting that we should eliminate FAAM and replace it with the option to purposely commit a foul. I don't know how big basketball is in Australia but here in the US, the NBA takes the concept of committing a foul on purpose to an EXTREME, so much so that the running joke is to not bother watching an NBA game until the final two minutes of the game which can sometimes drag out for twenty actual minutes or more in real life due to all the purposeful fouls to stop the clock. I think that is probably one of the reasons I haven't watched an NBA game in forty years. And the irony is that your intent is to speed up the game, but the NBA's purposeful fouls do just the opposite, so much so that they eventually had to go to a clock which breaks down into increments of tenths of a second. There are plays that can last (supposedly) two or three tenths of a seconds before the clock is stopped again due to a foul on purpose. (I can't help but see video clips and I do watch the very occasional college game, not NBA.)
I just can't wrap my head around the idea of committing a foul on purpose. To me, it would be like living in society and eventually saying, "Well, I guess this situation leaves me no choice but to commit murder then." My brain just can't process this.
So I postulate this theorem: If, like me, you are not a fan of the NBA, then you are likely to be in favor of the Foul and a Miss. If you are an NBA fan, then you would likely wish to see the FAAM repealed and replaced with a "push out" type rule.
Anyone, please post if you have an opinion.
whut? :grin:
Interesting point Phil. I agree with you, though inherently, I like to see most sports played with a predominantly offensive strategy.Snooker is like great music it requires dynamics. All out defense or offense is tedious and you lose the drama, I like it just the way it is. :thumbup:
It seems to me that the advocates of Pool are looking to change that Venn diagram so that the "Pool" circle engulfs the "Snooker" circle completely like an amoeba feasting on a protozoan.
But I think we can learn from other games. One example is inside and outside english compared to check and running side. The US terms are so much better and more accurate than traditional english terms.
I've also seen rules develop in different games, particularly english 8 ball, to a point where arguments are rare. Yet, the FAAM is a constant source of arguments in our local leagues.
Colin
The touching ball rule makes perfect sense to me, the pool rule is whacked imo, you are essentially forced to play a push shot or hit another ball when you are already hitting a ball.