The requirement is that a foot be touching the floor at the instant the tip hits the ball. The jack-in-the-box breakers may have a foot on the floor at that time.
I would absolutely bet on it.
The requirement is that a foot be touching the floor at the instant the tip hits the ball. The jack-in-the-box breakers may have a foot on the floor at that time.
I see a lot of knowledgeable people here. I was asking when they actually made it a rule that you had to keep one foot on the floor. 1800s 2020s ect.
The early "official" rules were determined by people like Cotton and later Hoyle who went to the trouble of writing down the rules more or less clearly, consistently and completely, based on how people played at the time. I think the first cue sports governing bodies were (from Wikipedia):who are "they"? i don't think "they" had sports governing body in 1674, but the book cited by bob likely reflects how it was played in england and probably also france at the time.
Never in my life. Not in a million years!!This is the only way to play this shot.
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This was all started by a tall hustler playing a short player.I don't think the problem is with both feet in the air, as in breaking, but with people laying over or crawling on the table to make a shot without having one foot on the floor.
Is he Latino or Scandinavian?Never in my life. Not in a million years!!
Is he Latino or Scandinavian?
Idk.Is he Latino or Scandinavian?
Maybe on the West Coast.The "one foot on the floor" rule has been there in pool tournaments forever. Back in the day when we made a game (gambling) we would have to stipulate "up on the table" prior to starting so this was allowed. No stipulation and it was one foot on the floor. I always asked for up on the table because it helped me reach many shots without a bridge. Up on the table was a common practice in gambling matches.
Lol I thought it was Lunda. Well same question.that's billy thorpe. iirc he is ohioan. possibly with appalachian migrant roots, but i'm no anthropologist. his english surname is of scandinavian origin though, but that's because vikings ruled large swathes of britain. thorp -> thorpe. torp means hamlet or small farm in swedish, and is among the most common placenamn suffixes in sweden.
What a gem Matt!!I tracked down the original artist who produced that poster. I think it is the coolest pool poster I’ve ever seen.
Ultimately the poster cost peanuts versus having it framed and matted but I think it turned out spectacular.
Lou told me that all the cues in the poster were Szamboti pool cues. This poster certainly has a novel theme.
You lived in Straight Pool country. Out west we played 9-Ball and One Pocket, never Straight Pool, except maybe one tournament a year.Maybe on the West Coast.
That didn't fly around here.