Seems a bit like a break & run competition.
I would be interested to see if there are any racking issues with that rule.
I think this is the way it ended.
1. Larry Nevel ($10k)
2. Alex Pagulayan ($6k)
3. Earl Strickland
4. Adam Smith
I never did hear how deep the payouts went and this would be good PR.
It is not listed ont he Seminole Pro tour site either.
This is one thing that is lacking on a lot of the big tournaments...follow ups.
It says in rule 8 that ref. may refer to WPA ,BCA , or Texas Express rules aren't they all a bit different. What is the ref suppose to do ,pick the set of rules that favors the player he or she is betting on. Or the player they happen to like the best?Seminole Pro Tour Tournament Rules
1.) Winner racks the balls. If both players come to prior agreement, it is legal for players to rack for one another.
2.) The game begins when the cue ball passes the head string.
If no contact was made with any of the balls, the incoming player has two options:
To take the break, relieving their opponent from being on a foul.
To have their opponent break again but, this time the opponent will be on one foul.
3.) When racking the ten balls, a player must place the One ball in front of the rack.
The Two ball and the Three ball go on each end, at the bottom of the rack.
The Ten ball must go in the middle of the rack.
It is the player’s responsibility to watch how their opponent racks and breaks.
If the player allows their opponent to break, no foul can be called for mis-racking.
4.) When making the Ten ball on the break, it will not count as a win; it does count as a ball made on the break. The Ten ball spots up immediately and the breaker keeps shooting, unless the Ten Ball blocks or bothers them from shooting the next ball in rotation. Should the Ten Ball block or bother the breaker from shooting the next ball in rotation, it will stay down until the breaker shoots the next ball in rotation, then the breaker may spot the Ten ball. The breaker must place the cue ball with in the box. All breaks must take place within the box.
Foul, break and jump rules
The Break (Intent to Disperse) – A player charged with the responsibility of breaking the balls in a standard game of 10-ball, must, in addition to driving at least six object balls to a rail (cue ball does not count), demonstrate intent to disperse balls over the length and breadth of the table; in other words, a player is expected to drive the cue ball into the rack with as much force as his/her skills allow.
If, in the opinion of the opposing player, the breaking player has not broken the rack with the intent of table-wide dispersion, the opposing player may call to stop play and request a judgment by a Tournament Director and/or Tournament Referee. Prior to the arrival of a Tournament Director and/or Tournament Referee to determine whether the breaking player has complied with this rule, no further play should be allowed. Further play by either player will negate the request for judgment of a “foul” and play will resume, as normal. The called-upon Tournament Director/Tournament Referee will examine the dispersion of balls on the table at the time of the “foul” and if in his/her opinion, the balls have not been broken with the intent of table-wide dispersion, the Tournament Director/Tournament Referee will verify the “Foul” and require the breaking player to break again.
The Tournament Director/Tournament Referee will remain at the table until a second break is initiated. If, in the opinion of the Tournament Director/Tournament Referee, the breaking player has again not complied with the “intent to disperse” rule, the Tournament Director/Tournament Referee will award the match to the opposing player. The breaking player will take the individual match as a standard “forfeit” loss and continue play in the tournament. If the same player is cited for the same infraction in a subsequent match, said player will forfeit their right to continue play in the tournament.
5.) FOULS- When a player shoots, no ball can be moved during the shot or it is a foul. If a player moves or touches a ball before they shoot, they must give the other player the option of leaving the ball in its new location or move the ball back to where it was. If the player moves any ball back before they give their opponent the option, it will be considered a foul. Any ball that jumps off the table is ruled to be a foul. Should a player move two or more balls on one rack, the game will be ruled a loss. Should a player’s shirt touch a ball when shooting, without moving the ball, it will not be deemed a foul.
6.) JUMP SHOTS- Players are allowed to use a jump cue to jump over any ball.
The jump cue must be a least 40” inches in length.
Each player is allowed two jumps per match with the 40” inch jump cue.
A player may jump as many times as they wish with their playing or break cue.
7.) FROZEN Q Ball- When a Q-Ball is frozen to an object ball the shooter must do the following:
Draw the Q-Ball away from the object ball. (Q-Ball must not pass the object ball)
The shooter must jack up at a 45 degree angle and shoot towards either edge of the object ball.
8.) For any additional rules the Tournament Director/Tournament Referee may refer to WPA, BCA or Texas Express rules. Tournament Director/Tournament Referee may use his or her discretion on all gray areas and will have the final say on all rulings.
Dress code strictly enforced: Men: NO jeans, must wear collared shirts, NO sneakers (dress shoes only). Women: Professional casual attire, NO sneakers, jeans, tank-tops or low cut shirts. All shirts must be tucked in during play.
* Rules are subject to change at certain tournaments. If there is a change in the rules, players will be notified at the players meeting prior to each event. Such rule changes could include “call shot, call safety.”
Copyright © Seminole Pro Tour- Official Web Site of the Seminole Pro Tour
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Johnnyt
Rule #4 seems very vague when it says 10 ball will be spotted right away unless it blocks or bothers the breaker from shooting the next ball in rotation. Well what if it doesn't block but it bothers me because of bla bla bla, rule way to vague IMOSeminole Pro Tour Tournament Rules
1.) Winner racks the balls. If both players come to prior agreement, it is legal for players to rack for one another.
2.) The game begins when the cue ball passes the head string.
If no contact was made with any of the balls, the incoming player has two options:
To take the break, relieving their opponent from being on a foul.
To have their opponent break again but, this time the opponent will be on one foul.
3.) When racking the ten balls, a player must place the One ball in front of the rack.
The Two ball and the Three ball go on each end, at the bottom of the rack.
The Ten ball must go in the middle of the rack.
It is the player’s responsibility to watch how their opponent racks and breaks.
If the player allows their opponent to break, no foul can be called for mis-racking.
4.) When making the Ten ball on the break, it will not count as a win; it does count as a ball made on the break. The Ten ball spots up immediately and the breaker keeps shooting, unless the Ten Ball blocks or bothers them from shooting the next ball in rotation. Should the Ten Ball block or bother the breaker from shooting the next ball in rotation, it will stay down until the breaker shoots the next ball in rotation, then the breaker may spot the Ten ball. The breaker must place the cue ball with in the box. All breaks must take place within the box.
Foul, break and jump rules
The Break (Intent to Disperse) – A player charged with the responsibility of breaking the balls in a standard game of 10-ball, must, in addition to driving at least six object balls to a rail (cue ball does not count), demonstrate intent to disperse balls over the length and breadth of the table; in other words, a player is expected to drive the cue ball into the rack with as much force as his/her skills allow.
If, in the opinion of the opposing player, the breaking player has not broken the rack with the intent of table-wide dispersion, the opposing player may call to stop play and request a judgment by a Tournament Director and/or Tournament Referee. Prior to the arrival of a Tournament Director and/or Tournament Referee to determine whether the breaking player has complied with this rule, no further play should be allowed. Further play by either player will negate the request for judgment of a “foul” and play will resume, as normal. The called-upon Tournament Director/Tournament Referee will examine the dispersion of balls on the table at the time of the “foul” and if in his/her opinion, the balls have not been broken with the intent of table-wide dispersion, the Tournament Director/Tournament Referee will verify the “Foul” and require the breaking player to break again.
The Tournament Director/Tournament Referee will remain at the table until a second break is initiated. If, in the opinion of the Tournament Director/Tournament Referee, the breaking player has again not complied with the “intent to disperse” rule, the Tournament Director/Tournament Referee will award the match to the opposing player. The breaking player will take the individual match as a standard “forfeit” loss and continue play in the tournament. If the same player is cited for the same infraction in a subsequent match, said player will forfeit their right to continue play in the tournament.
5.) FOULS- When a player shoots, no ball can be moved during the shot or it is a foul. If a player moves or touches a ball before they shoot, they must give the other player the option of leaving the ball in its new location or move the ball back to where it was. If the player moves any ball back before they give their opponent the option, it will be considered a foul. Any ball that jumps off the table is ruled to be a foul. Should a player move two or more balls on one rack, the game will be ruled a loss. Should a player’s shirt touch a ball when shooting, without moving the ball, it will not be deemed a foul.
6.) JUMP SHOTS- Players are allowed to use a jump cue to jump over any ball.
The jump cue must be a least 40” inches in length.
Each player is allowed two jumps per match with the 40” inch jump cue.
A player may jump as many times as they wish with their playing or break cue.
7.) FROZEN Q Ball- When a Q-Ball is frozen to an object ball the shooter must do the following:
Draw the Q-Ball away from the object ball. (Q-Ball must not pass the object ball)
The shooter must jack up at a 45 degree angle and shoot towards either edge of the object ball.
8.) For any additional rules the Tournament Director/Tournament Referee may refer to WPA, BCA or Texas Express rules. Tournament Director/Tournament Referee may use his or her discretion on all gray areas and will have the final say on all rulings.
Dress code strictly enforced: Men: NO jeans, must wear collared shirts, NO sneakers (dress shoes only). Women: Professional casual attire, NO sneakers, jeans, tank-tops or low cut shirts. All shirts must be tucked in during play.
* Rules are subject to change at certain tournaments. If there is a change in the rules, players will be notified at the players meeting prior to each event. Such rule changes could include “call shot, call safety.”
Copyright © Seminole Pro Tour- Official Web Site of the Seminole Pro Tour
Powered by WordPress | Designed by: Premium Free WordPress Themes | Thanks to Highest CD Rates, Themes Gallery and UK Fiverr
Johnnyt
I think having a laptop on each table and having to put your stats up after every game stops a lot of that. The players never no who's watching it go up instantly on the leader board. But I wouldn't worry much about it. The ABP will be putting rules in for cheating, dumping, spliting, and the like, very soon. Punishment will probably be sitting out of all tournaments for a year:smile:. Johnnyt
These professional players deserve more than the world is giving them, they deserve to make a decent living and an honest living at that. .
Well... The choking will come less and less, know if you miss it, your opponent can't win unless he banks it. So the format is good, and I think it should be the future of pool, but you don't see hordes of people commenting on that?! Do we?Mike,
I like 90% of what you said in the last two posts so naturally this being AZB I'm going to focus on the one thing I disagree with.
The players are like the entire rest of the world, they don't deserve a thing they don't earn. Without finding a way to find paying fans and sponsors they don't deserve a bit more than they are getting. Since so many big events seem to be ran more as a labor of love than a cash cow it could even be argued they are already getting more than they deserve. I'd like to see the 50th ranked player in the US making a decent living from competition alone but pool is a world away from that happening.
I shot benchrest with the best in the world, hall of famers, world record holders, the man that wrote the book on benchrest, on and on. One of these guys has dominated benchrest in a way that nobody has ever dominated pool. They surely deserve as much from their efforts which require every bit as much work and knowledge as shooting pool as the pool players deserve for playing pool. Lucky if there is a couple thousand of added goodies at a national event. The purse comes out of the shooter's pockets and they do pay a "greens fee".
Many other activities that the best in the world aren't compensated in relationship to their skills too. The pro pool players don't deserve and aren't entitled to a thing they don't earn. When a sugar daddy comes along and puts on an IPT or a Galveston that is wonderful but it isn't something deserved. The pro's need to lose their feelings of entitlement and maybe they could start working with each other and the other people in the pool world to make pool into something to justify people being able to make a living playing. Looking at it rationally pool players are entertainers. Right now the general public isn't finding them entertaining so they have nothing to sell to sponsors.
I like what you had to say about how tournaments should be ran. Might slow down the tourney a little but I like the idea of the ten ball having to be part of a few ball run rather than somebody running the table and choking able to give the other person the game. I can see this leading to a lot of tie games but I'd like to see it tried. We need some out the box thinking.
Hu
Well... The choking will come less and less, know if you miss it, your opponent can't win unless he banks it. So the format is good, and I think it should be the future of pool, but you don't see hordes of people commenting on that?! Do we?
Pool needs and innovator and corporate America to take a chance on pool, all of which I have been working on for the last 3 years, but... I have for the last 2 years been working a full time job, and still trying to play pool and run events.
BUT back to the rest of your post... I think that everyone should be rewarded for their talents. I am a fraud investigator, so I get paid well to do what I do, why? Because I am good at it. I make as much if not more than everyone in pool except the few TOP players who are in the top 10-15 or so...
So if life choose my down the path I am and I am good at something I deserve to be rewarded for it. The negative stigma and BAD backroom deals that have been made in professional pool are not the fault of, Mike Davis, Shaun Willkie, and other your TURE professionals who love the game. It isn't their fault people have messed up the game, and those to are personal friends, and they both deserve more than the pool world is giving them.
Now the gamblers, hustlers and the drug addicts they get exactly what they deserve, and this is something I have had to explain to corporations that, there is a difference between gamblers, and real professional players. TOP professional players don't need to gamble or hustle people for money, no they are good enough to make a living at the game of pool. NOW that is not to say that don't gamble because most do, SVB is a perfect example. Which that is fine in the manner which he and others gamble.
Now if SVB walked in to a bar in California and started playing some local dim whit for some cash, and he knew nothing about pool and he was just taking the guys money unfairly that would be a different story.
The problem is the true professionals DO deserve more than the world is giving them because they did not mess up multimillion dollar deals in the 90's, which kept the men’s professional pool off from TV. No they didn't cause that, and now that their generation and the younger generation like Jesse Engle is up and coming, they have to deal with the negative stigma pool is.
Again, not fair. But we need to start within ourselves and change the way we play pool and these tournaments. Just because you know how to rack "intelligently" or know how to "rack good" for your opponent doesn’t mean you have do, what’s wrong with giving a guy a good rack, on the spot and not mess around with the damn rack? All too often I have sat at top events and played events were racking was an issue.
And to stay true to the original post, this format only allows for more cheating, so that needs to go too. Take away the chance to cheat, its like a lock on your house, it is only designed to keep honest people honest.
Let’s fix that first, then worry about everything else.