Line-up Straight pool

Danny Harriman said:
It has been so long since I played the game of line up I don't remember it so well. Thanks Bob for giving the info on one of Worlds oldest practice games. I think I will look the game up in Byrnes Advanced book. I don't think if the game is played correctly that any player will be running 1000 but again the game is before my time. The fellow that showed me this was a strong snooker player fronm my hometown and as I remember it did help my game.

Ok. I thought you meant such a practice in which you place 15 balls spaced evenly between the head and the foot rail through the foot, center and head spot and then just shoot in any order in any pocket and after you clear the table you replace all the balls, leave the cueball where it is and continue shooting. Kind of like the line-up in snooker. Never heard the term "line-up straight pool", in here this form of practice is referred just as "line-up". For a pro this should be a quite tedious pocketing exercise and running a 1000 is just a question of stroke repetition and maintaining at least some level of focus. Actually I think after an hour or two it becomes a physical stamina exercise and how well you cope the fatigue that steps in...
 
mworkman said:
Do any of you guys play line-up? There is a line-up straight league not too far from my place in the summer time.

Just wondering about how the high runs would compare? I tried it at home on my little 7' table, and haven't been able to get into the 3rd rack yet, maybe just because I haven't spent much time on it yet.

For those of you that have played both, what are your high runs in each?

Just curious, Thanks


Hi everybody !

My first post on this forum.

Line up straight pool is still being played here in Quebec, Canada, mostly by people over 50 years old.

As far as I can remember Alain Martel had the highest run... around 450 balls(that was 10 years ago).

George Fels is right when he says Pierre Morin is the guy who knows the most about the history of the game.

Pierre has also written 2 books on billiards. His first book : Techniques du billard published in 1978 has a section about the strategies of this game.

However the book is in French...:rolleyes:

here is a link from where you can write to him.

http://translate.google.com/transla...r=MORI1018&sl=fr&tl=en&history_state0=&swap=1
 
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It seems in this game you start off with a full rack and the subsequent racks are played in a way that you place all the balls in a line from head to foot short rail on the center... Couldn't find any more information with the Google, nor the diagram to place the balls.

Finnish player's run of 1050 was done with just the line-up, he didn't start with a full rack. And he didn't reposition his cueball after shooting the 15th ball, he added the balls in the line and continued shooting. Just talked with him yesterday, it took him over 3 hours and he's a damn fast shooter.
 
mjantti said:
It seems in this game you start off with a full rack and the subsequent racks are played in a way that you place all the balls in a line from head to foot short rail on the center... Couldn't find any more information with the Google, nor the diagram to place the balls.

Finnish player's run of 1050 was done with just the line-up, he didn't start with a full rack. And he didn't reposition his cueball after shooting the 15th ball, he added the balls in the line and continued shooting. Just talked with him yesterday, it took him over 3 hours and he's a damn fast shooter.

CueTable Help



This is how the balls are respotted (the balls are touching each others) after they all have been sinked. The strategy consists of pocketing 4 or 5 balls and then proceed to break the string to continue the run. After pocketing the last ball, try to leave the CB as shown in the diagram to keep on shooting. ;)
 
Thanks for the diagram zook, much appreciated. The "line-up" practice in here means that the balls are distributed evenly all the way up to the head cushion, no break-ups are needed. Easier of course than this one with frozen balls (no pun intended) :)
 
LINE-UP POCKET BILLIARDS

THIS game is played with fifteen object balls, numbered from 1
to 15, and a cue ball. Object balls are racked on the foot spot,
as in 14.1 continuous pocket billiards. (See Diagram No. 11.)
Starting player has cue ball in hand. It is a call shot game,
players being required to call the ball and the pocket.
Each ball legally pocketed gives the scorer credit for one
point. All balls pocketed on a legally called shot count, the
player getting one point for each ball.
Game is an agreed upon number of points-it can be 25, 50,
100, or whatever score agreed upon.

Start of Play: Rotation of play can be determined by lag or lot.
Winner of lag has option of breaking or assigning break to his
opponent.
Starting player must pocket a called ball in the rack or drive
two object balls to a cushion. Failure to do so is a foul. Offending
player forfeits two points. Opponent can require that
offender break again until he complies with the break shot requirements.
Player loses two points for each successive failure.

Subsequent Play: After the legal break shot, if starting player
has not scored, incoming player accepts balls in position. He
must call his shots --ball and pocket -- on all strokes. Player continues
until he misses. At the conclusion of his inning, he
records his points, and all balls he scored are spotted on the
long string line. (See Diagram No. 9.)
If player scores all fifteen balls, they are spotted on the string
line and he continues play, shooting cue ball from where it
came to rest after preceding stroke.

Penalties: When a player fouls, he is penalized one point. Only
one penalty is imposed, however, if the player fouls more than
once on the same stroke.

General Rules: The rules for 14.1 continuous pocket billiards
apply to line-up pocket billiards. Balls scored on foul strokes do
not count. Penalties are paid out of the player's score. If he has
no points at time of foul, he owes a point, which is deducted
after he scores.
Sorry, but I don't see any diagrams to view, is there someplace else where I should be looking?
 
Sorry, but I don't see any diagrams to view, is there someplace else where I should be looking?
I assume they are in the rule book I copied the text from.

The racking and spotting are just like the rules for straight pool, except all pocketed balls are spotted at the end of each turn.
 
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