Chris Renfro (from Outsville) posted this on Facebook
From the players contract:
"APPENDIX II
The Break Rules
1. Over the first three days of the Event, during the double elimination rounds, a racking device will
be used.
From the round of 16 onwards, the following conditions on the break shot:
1. The balls will be racked with the 9 (nine) ball resting on the spot.
2. The balls will be hand racked by the referee into a wooden rack. Some balls may be tapped to
‘hold’ the rack.
3. Players will be permitted to inspect the rack but cannot ask for the balls to be re-racked, repositioned
or moved."
So there is "double elimination rounds" which leads us to think there will be single elimination at some point?
Racking rules are changing in the middle of a tournament? Eh?
At least they don't seem to be using the 3 balls past the headstring rule. But 9 on the spot is not very effective, the corner ball and/or the 1 are still pretty easy to make as anyone that watched tournaments should know (like the people making the rules).
Seems to me they are trying to skew the rules towards the European players who break with the 9 on the spot in many more events than US players. Funny how the one thing that almost all players agree on, no jump cues, is still not being used.
From the players contract:
"APPENDIX II
The Break Rules
1. Over the first three days of the Event, during the double elimination rounds, a racking device will
be used.
From the round of 16 onwards, the following conditions on the break shot:
1. The balls will be racked with the 9 (nine) ball resting on the spot.
2. The balls will be hand racked by the referee into a wooden rack. Some balls may be tapped to
‘hold’ the rack.
3. Players will be permitted to inspect the rack but cannot ask for the balls to be re-racked, repositioned
or moved."
So there is "double elimination rounds" which leads us to think there will be single elimination at some point?
Racking rules are changing in the middle of a tournament? Eh?
At least they don't seem to be using the 3 balls past the headstring rule. But 9 on the spot is not very effective, the corner ball and/or the 1 are still pretty easy to make as anyone that watched tournaments should know (like the people making the rules).
Seems to me they are trying to skew the rules towards the European players who break with the 9 on the spot in many more events than US players. Funny how the one thing that almost all players agree on, no jump cues, is still not being used.