Yup. Might help that I'm polite while doing it. Granted, you might not assume that from my last post.
My two best friends were made through conflicts at pool tourneys. One when I was running the tourney and we ended up toe-to-toe yelling at each other at the end for about ten minutes after which we simultaneously offered to buy each other a beer. The other was a disagreement on a foul--I called it on him, he disagreed, but backed down, I insisted that we discuss the situation and resolve it like men...either we agree what happened or re-rack the game. There is no insulting or being unreasonable, it is simply firmly standing up for what you believe.
In the case that the OP stated, I'd probably say, 'I know you probably don't realize it and maybe it isn't something that would bother you, but it is generally considered rude and disrespectful to play with balls on another table during a match.'
It might be hard for you to understand, but there are a lot of men who respect people who can calmly and firmly address situations. It is a way in which mutual understanding is reached. Most of the people I choose to hang around with are this way. Those are the people I like. My close group of 6-7 friends play a non-handicapped cash league together, we have BBQs together, we fish and camp together. We are all like this. When we show up to a bar tourney, most of the other players come over to us to say, 'hi,' and talk to us. We are remembered and welcomed by the staff and other players after being most places only once. This is because people know that with us there, crap like the OP's statement will be addressed without it elevating to physical engagement. I've had people ask me to watch shots that my best friend was taking because they know that I will call it correctly...and that my friend would lose respect for me if I didn't.
BTW, I've been close friends with these people for eight years...and I'm still the new guy.
You mention the word 'men' quite a bit --- as in the context of 'acting like men.' You spoke of testicles and the implication of not having them being equated with running crying to an authority. Interesting stuff.
Yelling in each others faces for 10 minutes is disruptive to any league or tournament and yes --- I think it would be something that those of us without testicles would wish to avoid.
I suspect that even several with testicles would wish to avoid having to fade all that yelling during a tournament as well. (Just a guess. )
This isn't the wild west. It's an organized billiard competition.
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