Hello, can we ask a referee for a rule during a game or not, what do the rules say about it?
Thanks!
Thank you for your answers, I experienced a situation in a tournament this week end, the cueball and an object ball was frozen, I asked to the referee if the balls was really frozen and if I could make a direct push shot, he answered me, play and I will tell you after your shot, I was stunned by this answer, that was in a tournament of federation here in Canada.
At snooker all the players know the rules for a touching ball. At pool, most don't as shown by a current discussion on FleeceBunk.In snooker the referee will automatically tell the player if the cue ball is frozen to an object ball. If it is he will say "touching ball".
It's possible that your federation has its own set of rules. In any case you need to read through whichever set they use. You may want to bring a copy to events in case you run into officials who are not familiar with the rules. I've seen lots of TDs with that problem.Thank you for your answers, I experienced a situation in a tournament this week end, the cueball and an object ball was frozen, I asked to the referee if the balls was really frozen and if I could make a direct push shot, he answered me, play and I will tell you after your shot, I was stunned by this answer, that was in a tournament of federation here in Canada.
“Touching ball”At snooker all the players know the rules for a touching ball. At pool, most don't as shown by a current discussion on FleeceBunk.
Thank you for your answers, I experienced a situation in a tournament this week end, the cueball and an object ball was frozen, I asked to the referee if the balls was really frozen and if I could make a direct push shot, he answered me, play and I will tell you after your shot, I was stunned by this answer, that was in a tournament of federation here in Canada.
I can see trying in vain to explain that call to the guy who just rammed it.That may have been the correct reply, they can tell you the rule, but not how you need to shoot. So a double hit is a foul, but they can't tell you how to avoid it. There is a rule about frozen balls that you can hit through them directly and it is not a double hit or a push foul, but you can actually do a push or double hit foul in this situation if you are not careful with the tip and depending on the speed.
I asked for a rule not how to play, just to read what I wrote.....That may have been the correct reply, they can tell you the rule, but not how you need to shoot. So a double hit is a foul, but they can't tell you how to avoid it. There is a rule about frozen balls that you can hit through them directly and it is not a double hit or a push foul, but you can actually do a push or double hit foul in this situation if you are not careful with the tip and depending on the speed.
But whether the balls are frozen is an objective fact which the referee should be able to tell the player.At snooker all the players know the rules for a touching ball. At pool, most don't as shown by a current discussion on FleeceBunk.
In both games the ref is required by the rules to announce a frozen (or touching) ball.But whether the balls are frozen is an objective fact which the referee should be able to tell the player.
In both games the ref is required by the rules to announce a frozen (or touching) ball.
I asked for a rule not how to play, just to read what I wrote.....![]()
And if I ask if I can shoot directly straight on object ball push shot if balls are frozen, that the same thing to ask for a rule, no? I ask it and after that's me to choose what I do.He can call the balls frozen, but he can't tell you how to shoot it to avoid a foul or what the result of you shooting the shot a certain way would be.
There are several facets to this situation.Thank you for your answers, I experienced a situation in a tournament this week end, the cueball and an object ball was frozen, I asked to the referee if the balls was really frozen and if I could make a direct push shot, he answered me, play and I will tell you after your shot, I was stunned by this answer, that was in a tournament of federation here in Canada.
The question was: can I make a direct push shot?? no more and the correct answer should have been, YESS and no more.There are several facets to this situation.
1) "if the balls was actually frozen" (sic) - Yes, the referee can (and probably should) make that determination.
2) "if I could make a direct push shot" - The referee can inform you that, under the rules, shooting directly through a frozen shot like this does not IN ITS OWN RIGHT constitute a foul.
3) #2 does NOT mean a foul will NOT occur, and therefore a referee cannot tell you whether a foul WILL occur. The referee is correct that they can only tell you whether a foul occurred after the shot.
Probably the best explanation you will get on here. I agree that it is the referee's duty to inform a player if the cue ball is frozen or not. I for one, DO NOT LIKE the relatively new rule that you can shoot directly through a frozen ball. That just opens things up to controversy. Who is to really say a player did or did not "push" the balls? Do you really want an amateur ref making this call? In the old rules you could shoot through the cue ball at an angle to the object ball, thus avoiding the push. Of course by now they've "fixed" the rules so well that there are more controversies than ever before.There are several facets to this situation.
1) "if the balls was actually frozen" (sic) - Yes, the referee can (and probably should) make that determination.
2) "if I could make a direct push shot" - The referee can inform you that, under the rules, shooting directly through a frozen shot like this does not IN ITS OWN RIGHT constitute a foul.
3) #2 does NOT mean a foul will NOT occur, and therefore a referee cannot tell you whether a foul WILL occur. The referee is correct that they can only tell you whether a foul occurred after the shot.