WPA Rules said:
3.24 PUSH SHOT FOULS
It is a foul if the cue ball is pushed by the cue tip, with contact being maintained for more than the momentary time commensurate with a stroked shot. (Such shots are usually referred to as push shots.)
I'm not sure if I am using the correct terminology here, but if the term "legal push shot" is an oxymoron, perhaps I should say "stroked frozen shot" or something else. For this post, for lack of a better term, I'll use "legal push shot"...
I'm curious about the "time" aspect of a push shot. Has there been any studies on the contact time on a legal push shot vs. a normal shot?
My gut tells me that
any push shot would have a longer contact time than a non-push shot.
Is there any data available on this?
I think my confusion comes from the words, "momentary time", but now I believe I understand the rule (a little bit better than before at least).
Please correct any of the following statements that are inaccurate:
- If the cue ball is frozen to the object ball, and the object ball moves when the cue ball is struck, this is called a push shot.
- A normal shot has a shorter contact time than a push shot has.
- Both a normal shot and a legal push shot have only a momentary contact time, but an illegal push shot has a significantly longer contact time.
- A legal push shot is legal because, although the contact time is longer than a normal shot, it is still only momentary, and not long enough to create any "funny business".
Is my understanding correct? Hopefully I'm not totally
