I was playing in the Western BCA Team tournament and I notice the opposing player make a bad hit. My team player who was playing him assumed he didn't foul since he didn't say anything. I asked the opposing player if he thought it was a bad hit and he said it was. I then asked him why he didn't admit to a bad hit. He said if my team player had asked if it was a bad hit he would of admitted it but since he didn't ask he wouldn't admit to the foul.
My team player was in his seat (where his suppose to be) and didn't have the vantage point that I had. Any opinions on this?
This reminds me of a funny story. Back in the 80s I was watching a fairly big tournament. Gary Pinkowski was running out when he unexpectedly missed in the middle of the rack. He looked up from the table and noticed his opponent fooling around scuffing his tip. Gary asked "did you see that shot?". His opponent said "no, what happened?" Gary said "oh you missed it, it was a good one". He kept shooting, ran out the rack and ended up winning a close match.
I always pay close attention to the game at all times. It's hard to tell when you're going to run into a player like that.
Puma, What would happen if he let you run out (pocket the eight) and then tells you you that hit all the wrong balls in and lose? But that was a nice run.
Puma, What would happen if he let you run out (pocket the eight) and then tells you you that hit all the wrong balls in and lose? But that was a nice run.
Just curious here ... how may honest men pick up the CB automatically without being called on it, when they foul for 100 or 200 a rack?![]()
$600 a game in the center...my partner betting $1,200 on the side....
...I touched the cue ball, nobody saw it but I felt it...called the foul.
...whole pool hall was betting, they were stunned.
But we left with all the cash...tough joint but they gave me respect.
I don't double think on calling my own fouls...if you don't, you'll keep making them.
Those prices, btw, were when you could buy a new car for $3,200
An unackowedged foul is cheating
So... perhaps, subconsciously, you took the choice in this tough joint to be safe instead of sorry, cause the only way to know for sure no one saw you was to walk out that door and see if you make it. That's a risk in and of itself. Seems there was some additional consideration and mental motivation to come clean. I don't blame you. :thumbup:
I'm not saying you wouldn't have called the foul on yourself, I'm just suggesting ... it's easier for these honest posters to be noble typing on a forum than it might be in a real game, depending on the stakes.
Funny you should mention that...my partner said I should do that more often...
...he said the attitude of the whole room changed when I called that foul.
But I come from golf, where that is the normal practice....
...and I come from a family where that is mandatory.
I consider it a winning habit....find another way of winning and you betray your talent and
lose some faith in yourself.
Cheaters tend to dog it
If I am the shooter, guess what I am concentrating on? And it's not whether or not I going to make a bad hit. If its close you get someone to make the call and the guy that is sitting in the chair should have gotten someone to call it. If it was me and it would be close I would tell the guy to get some one to call it.
I was playing at the Western BCA, and did something stupid. I played the wrong ball. The guy broke, apparently sank 2 stripes and a solid. Decided to play solids, hit one in, and then on the next turn hit a stripe in after a legal hit. I get to the table, could have sworn he was stripes as I watched him shooting, counted the balls and that matched what I was thinking. Finally, called the 2 in the side. It was clearly called, there was no other shots in that direction. As soon as I hit it, he jumps out of his seat and calls foul, ball in hand...
Stupid on my part for not KNOWING I was stripes, but good god I was pissed off. Perhaps I'm just a nice guy, but I am NOT going to sit there and watch someone play the wrong ball. I just am not that kind of guy. This bastard was out of his seat calling foul so quick with a shit eating grin on his face...ouch. Anyway, I learned two things, both my fault entirely. Do not be stupid and not know CLEARLY what's going on in your game. Also, assume all opponents are absolute asses. I'll be fine moving forward.
The one thing that makes me smile on this match, it went hill to hill. Our team was home, I had the hill match. Broke and ran. It would have been better if the ass I had this issue with was their best player, and was the one that got to sit and watch the BR...but felt nice none the less...