Rack rigging?

poolchic

help me lord
Silver Member
Does anyone know the different methods of rigging the racks? I would like to know so i can tell the difference. Thanks.;)
 
Well, here's a few things to look for...although they may or may not be intentional, these things can wreck your 9-Ball break...

1. The 1 ball may be off of either or both of the next two balls. This is the most common, and may not be intentional, but it is devistating to your break.

2. The rack may be turned towards the side that you break from.

3. The rack may be racked with the one ball slightly above the rack.

4. The balls may not be touching the nine ball, causing them to spread while hardly moving the nine.

Nothing spectacular here, but these are basically what I watch for.
 
Joe Tucker's DVD's

poolchic said:
Does anyone know the different methods of rigging the racks? I would like to know so i can tell the difference. Thanks.;)


I strongly recommend buying Joe Tucker's DVD's on racking. Aside from teaching you to recognize "bad" racks they help you deal with them. Often what I thought was a bad rack in the past, I now jump all over as an opportunity after watching his DVD's.

One of the toughest racks you can give someone is a nice tight rack with the balls arranged in an order likely to make a run difficult. Once someone starts loosening up or deliberately changing the position of the rack they are creating new lines of force that can often be exploited.

Hu
 
If either of the two balls below the 9 are not touching the 9, it will cause the 9 to be thrown that direction towards that lower corner pocket, pocketing the nine a high percentage of the time. This is good to know for rack your own tournaments, or to decide which side to break from when inspecting the rack someone else gives you.

I've never been a stickler about checking racks or anything like that, and am not one to believe you can rack the same way every time and always make a certain ball, but I did get knocked out of a tournament due to this exact circumstance once. I was playing in a planet nineball tourny in which I started out playing horrible and lost my first match. It was a rack-your-own tourny. I finally hit a gear an won a few matches, and then played this kid. It was a race to five in the one-loss side. I missed one shot the first rack which ended up in him having a 2-9 combo. He made the nine on the break the next 3 racks and had me down 4-0. I had never been inclined to check someone's rack before, but I did in this situation, given he made the nine the exact same way in the same pocket all 3 times. Turns out the ball to left below the 9 was frozen to it, while the one on the right was not. I asked him to rerack it, and after I checked it with satisfaction, he broke and the nine didn't move an inch. I lost 5-2, as it was hard to overcome that deficit. It was easy to tell he didn't do this on purpose, or know what exactly he was doing, but out of repetition ended up racking the same way every time luckily for him. So in some circumstances, this minute detail can make a difference.
 
ShootingArts said:
I strongly recommend buying Joe Tucker's DVD's on racking. Aside from teaching you to recognize "bad" racks they help you deal with them. Often what I thought was a bad rack in the past, I now jump all over as an opportunity after watching his DVD's.

One of the toughest racks you can give someone is a nice tight rack with the balls arranged in an order likely to make a run difficult. Once someone starts loosening up or deliberately changing the position of the rack they are creating new lines of force that can often be exploited.

Hu

People speak highly of this DVD
 
ShootingArts said:
I strongly recommend buying Joe Tucker's DVD's on racking. Aside from teaching you to recognize "bad" racks they help you deal with them. Often what I thought was a bad rack in the past, I now jump all over as an opportunity after watching his DVD's.

One of the toughest racks you can give someone is a nice tight rack with the balls arranged in an order likely to make a run difficult. Once someone starts loosening up or deliberately changing the position of the rack they are creating new lines of force that can often be exploited.

Hu
Another vote for Joe T. Hell of a nice guy, and a great resource for knowledge. The information on the 9 ball rack he teaches in the DVD really is worth the cost in and of itself.
Chuck
 
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