Fortunately this only happened on our practice table, so it didn't cause a "debate" in our match, but I'd still like to know what the right rule interpretation would have been for it.
An object ball, neither the next consecutive ball nor the 9-ball, is hanging in a corner pocket.
The next consecutive ball and the cue ball are in positions that it makes sense to back the ball back to try to pocket the hanger.
When the player takes the shot he accidentally brushes the hanger with his hand and it falls in the pocket.
The banked ball comes back and goes dead in the pocket. It very likely would have successfully knocked in the hanger and it may or may not have followed the hanger in.
We didn't know what the right rule really was, but we came up with this resolution:
The two balls that went in would be called dead, the shooting player would lose his turn, but the incoming player would not get ball in hand.
Was that the right interpretation? If not, what would have been?
An object ball, neither the next consecutive ball nor the 9-ball, is hanging in a corner pocket.
The next consecutive ball and the cue ball are in positions that it makes sense to back the ball back to try to pocket the hanger.
When the player takes the shot he accidentally brushes the hanger with his hand and it falls in the pocket.
The banked ball comes back and goes dead in the pocket. It very likely would have successfully knocked in the hanger and it may or may not have followed the hanger in.
We didn't know what the right rule really was, but we came up with this resolution:
The two balls that went in would be called dead, the shooting player would lose his turn, but the incoming player would not get ball in hand.
Was that the right interpretation? If not, what would have been?