In a BCA 8-ball league game this week, I experienced what I thought was blatent sharking. I broke and made nothing, and then my opponent ran 5 balls and missed, getting a good roll and leaving me with no shot, and no good safety that I could see. I tried a tough shot and missed. He finished his last 2 balls and missed the 8, leaving it right in front of the corner pocket.
So I had 8 balls to go, and now the pressure was on me to make what was a tough runout for me. Well, I guess he was starting to sweat because he started talking through the entire run. Basically, he was talking about almost every shot, oh, a lot of English, yatta yatta yatta. For most of the run, I was able to ignore it and not let it bother me, but I guess I didn't realize that my frustration was building.
I made some tricky position for my last two balls before the 8, getting the best position I could on my last stripe, a shot down the rail past the side. Definitely a missable shot for me. He steps it up, saying "I coulda had him 10-0. Anytime you have 7 balls on the table, and the other guys balls are gone, blah blah blah. That was an easy runout." (Of course, it wasn't really an easy runout, IMO, with, for example, the 8-ball blocking one of the pockets, and me wanting to avoid banking on this foreign barbox at all costs.) Yes, I was starting to get pissed, even though I know it just means his sharking was working.
So I waited for a few seconds, hoping he'd zip it and I'd be able to shoot, but my patience ran out quickly at that point. I turned and said the first thing that came to mind, which was, hey whenever you're ready to stop commentating, I'm ready to start shooting. He stopped talking right away, and I made my last stripe and then the easy 8-ball.
I shook his hand, and said good game, and then he says, well if I knew he was going to be a d**k, I would have tried harder.

LOL. I really didn't think what I said was that bad at all, considering the fact that he really was commentating on my shooting and the game, loudly. I think I should have said or done something earlier, instead of letting it build up. Also, I forgot to remind myself what sharking says about the shark, which is that he is scared that you are going to win.
Anyway, his reaction made me wonder if what he was doing was really intentional or not. I guess maybe some people just don't realize how distracting they are being, and perhaps only subconsciously know that their sharking gives them more opportunities to win after it throws someone off their game. He shot well enough to know better, I would have thought, but after all, it was just a league at a bar. But hey, he wants that trip to Vegas, and so do I!
Well, after our brief bit of snapping at each other across the room, it died down, and fortunately, we were both rational enough to let it go and shake hands again when the league night was done. I definitely need to work on my anti-sharking skills, which was a big part of why I decided to join a league.
