Then why are the singles championships seeded with the two highest players playing each other, and so on down the line?But with everyone except the very best and the very worst, the 9-Ball handicap in APA really does level the playing field. .![]()
Then why are the singles championships seeded with the two highest players playing each other, and so on down the line?But with everyone except the very best and the very worst, the 9-Ball handicap in APA really does level the playing field. .![]()
Call shot eliminates slop.If we're talking about illogical rules, how about the "call shot" rules for 8 ball and 10 ball in WPA? To me that is equally as ridiculous as the rules previously discussed. Why should I instruct my opponent as to what shot I'm playing? It makes no sense, a legal shot should be legal without the intentions being made clear in advance. It's a remnant of bar rules, with argumentative drunks arguing about luck. It needlessly complicates the game, breeds conflict for a questionable objective to "eliminate luck" which doesn't come into play much in the pro game, and when it does is usually exciting to the audience rather than the opposite.
Call shot belongs in straight pool and banks, and nowhere else. That is because not having it would ruin the mechanics of those games, and that is the only reason such a rule should ever be implemented. It doesnt' belong in 9ball, 10 ball, straight rotation or 8 ball and certainly not one pocket, though I've never heard anyone advocate for that, fortunately.
Call shot is IMO unnecessary and does eliminate certain skilled shots where you have the ability to pocket either one ball or the other, for instance. Not to mention for certain kicks, where you could be penalized for pocketing a ball (10 ball). Rules should be simple and intuitive. Whenver you institute complicating factors into the rules, there should be very good reasons indeed.i dont think theres anything wrong with “call shot” in wpa 8ball. You don't have to tell your opponent which pocket you are shooting at every single turn, i always took it as “call shot” just means you can’t fluke one in and keep shooting, like in 9ball.
For the most part, “calling” a shot is only necessary when you are doing some tricky shit (see dr daves post) that could easily be observed as a fluke by your potentially less than intelligent opponent.
When you say call shot doesn’t belong in 10 ball i have to disagree wholeheartedly. Ive said this on here many times before but i dont even really see the point of 10ball unless it is a call shot game. Since its already a nitpicky bastardized 9b i even advocate for callshot/callsafe to be played in 10b, just to give it a reason to exist.
9ball is the perfect game for flukes and randomness, and for those guys that dont like that aspect of it they can just go and play 10ball. In 8ball i dont think you should be able to shoot after a fluke and the answer to that is making it a “call shot” game.
i dont see why jumping a ball off table on the break should penalize you harder than scratching? I cant think of another time when jumping a ball off table is more detrimental than a normal foul aside from jumping the 8ball. Unless, you feel any foul on the break should be ball in hand instead of ball in kitchen?
I had the EXACT thing happen to me in an 8-ball match. hill-hill, came down to a safety battle which my opp lost. Through out the match my opp would call me "sir", and compliment me on a nice shot. I returned the compliments so it seemed like a gentleman's game.I could probably do a multi-part video for the APA!
Thanks.
Call shot is IMO unnecessary and does eliminate certain skilled shots where you have the ability to pocket either one ball or the other, for instance. Not to mention for certain kicks, where you could be penalized for pocketing a ball (10 ball). Rules should be simple and intuitive. Whenver you institute complicating factors into the rules, there should be very good reasons indeed.
10 ball is played without call shot in the Phillipines and it's still a distinct game. The break is different and the extra ball does change the game a bit.
I advocate for ball in hand anywhere on the table on all fouls in 8 ball, except the illegal break (4 balls did not hit a cushion, in which case I believe the opponent should get the break or the option to have his opponent rebreak). I made a post earlier with my proposed simplifications.
I wouldn't mind ball in kitchen if the opponent has to spot a ball after a foul. After the break, ball in kitchen can create a a significant advantage for the fouling player, if a ball is spotted that reduces the advantage. I believe most of the games that require ball in kitchen also allow spotting a ball if all the balls are behind the head string, but if the opponent spots his ball, there are now 2 balls on the spot, again protecting the fouling player.Ball in kitchen is quite obviously a carryover rule from the old days of straight pool and slow rugs when most of the rack stayed downtable. ball in kitchen also is still implemented heavily with the spot shot in rotation pool, and makes a good deal of sense in that game, but with 8ball nowadays it can certainly be annoying when you get ball-in-kitchen and can’t shoot at the easiest pattern for the runout (which for many would be eliminating the top half of the table first and working your way down toward the 8). This is why i mentioned that i dont see the necessity for it…. scratching on the break can and does happen all the time even when the shooter did nothing wrong, and i dont see any reason to enforce stiffer punishments for that when ball in kitchen with an open table is still a death sentence up against a competent opponent.
You should have gotten a ruling from the tournament director. Fouls or losses need to be called immediately. Not 30 seconds later. And I'm betting it was more then 30 seconds.I had the EXACT thing happen to me in an 8-ball match. hill-hill, came down to a safety battle which my opp lost. Through out the match my opp would call me "sir", and compliment me on a nice shot. I returned the compliments so it seemed like a gentleman's game.
After my opp lost the safety battle, he walked away disgusted with his last shot. Being a gentleman, I took BIH, pointed to the side pocket briefly (didn't mark it) and dropped it in the side just like you did in the video. My opp goes outside, chats to a team-mate and enters in less than 30 seconds. He tells me I didn't "mark the pocket" so I lost. EVERYONE knew exactly where the 8-ball was going. Thing is: my new captain on this new team disagreed with me. I rarely if ever lose my temper, but this guy scumbagged me! I told him if he needed the win that bad ,he could have it.
The next week, I got kicked off of the team; I guess they thought I was going to be a troublemaker. Was no big loss as I was going to cherry-pick the teams I wanted to play hoping to get the better players. It was a bangers league.
im not referring to bar 8ball, or ball in kitchen for all fouls.I wouldn't mind ball in kitchen if the opponent has to spot a ball after a foul. After the break, ball in kitchen can create a a significant advantage for the fouling player, if a ball is spotted that reduces the advantage. I believe most of the games that require ball in kitchen also allow spotting a ball if all the balls are behind the head string, but if the opponent spots his ball, there are now 2 balls on the spot, again protecting the fouling player.
It amazes me how many people think ball in hand is "chickenshit", It's hard for me to think of anything more chickenshit than fouling and gaining advantage, a situation that happens regularly with ball in kitchen. It's surprising how many people never even thought about the flaws in bar 8 ball rules.
League operators can pretty much put people at any rating they want. Seems arbitrary to me.Arbitrary ratings? Seems just like an opinion of yours
Ratings can be manipulated in every league
Sandbagging happens in every league as well
how is it rewarded in apa?
9 ball is only as sloppy as the people playing it.The same people will go and play regular 9ball which is it self a sloppy game, go figure
That's why many league Operators have handicap advisory committees. Committees made from the better players in the league who are kept anonymous. Of course it's the league operators final decision, but usually he will enforce what the committee decides.League operators can pretty much put people at any rating they want. Seems arbitrary to me.
The lower your numbers, the better chance you have to win. You can also ruin your team if players advance too far. Ideally, there should be more incentive for people to improve and move up, not stay as low as possible.
9 ball is only as sloppy as the people playing it.
That's not really how it works. LO's can override the computer's calculated handicap if they feel it's too LOW, but not if they feel it's too HIGH. That's to prevent untrustworthy LO's from 'helping' teams sandbag. Yes, some LOs have been known to be untrustworthy. Happens in every league format. Over the years, many different "incentives to win" have been introduced, like MVP programs, multi-point scoring, and even the Singles program. But if someone is determined to play dishonestly, they can usually get away with it for a while. How long depends on (1) how diligent the LO is in using all the tools they've been given and (2) how diligent the rest of the league is in scoring properly and reporting abnormalities to the LO. No matter what you do or how good your tools get, though, there will always be someone who gets off on cheating, and all you can do is root those people out and refuse to do business with them. If you're not strong enough to do that you shouldn't be running a league in any format.League operators can pretty much put people at any rating they want. Seems arbitrary to me.
The lower your numbers, the better chance you have to win. You can also ruin your team if players advance too far. Ideally, there should be more incentive for people to improve and move up, not stay as low as possible.
9 ball is only as sloppy as the people playing it.
That's not really how it works. LO's can override the computer's calculated handicap if they feel it's too LOW, but not if they feel it's too HIGH. That's to prevent untrustworthy LO's from 'helping' teams sandbag. Yes, some LOs have been known to be untrustworthy. Happens in every league format. Over the years, many different "incentives to win" have been introduced, like MVP programs, multi-point scoring, and even the Singles program. But if someone is determined to play dishonestly, they can usually get away with it for a while. How long depends on (1) how diligent the LO is in using all the tools they've been given and (2) how diligent the rest of the league is in scoring properly and reporting abnormalities to the LO. No matter what you do or how good your tools get, though, there will always be someone who gets off on cheating, and all you can do is root those people out and refuse to do business with them. If you're not strong enough to do that you shouldn't be running a league in any format.
Still don't know what you mean by arbitrary. Inferior compared to what?This is why arbitrary systems are inferior. Manipulation is much easier.
Arbitrary because they are largely made up by the LOs, and are very subjective to the small area the league happens to be in.Still don't know what you mean by arbitrary. Inferior compared to what?
Only League operator can do that . It must be done through the league management system , or LMS. And only the league operator should have access to thatIn the bca score app, when you add a player to a team, it asks you they're Fargo, and you can literally change it in the spot to whatever you want as you add them to the team