WPA Adopts Rulesets for 1P and Banks?

Agreed for the most part, but the WPA may now be in a position to sanction a World 1-pocket championship, and that, to me, is an exciting prospect.
Maybe, then I think of what they did with 10 ball. Fatboy nailed it in calling it a snooze fest
 
There were some other revisions. One of the major ones is that the player may use his body and cue as he sees fit to aim, measure, and plan shots. It is no longer a foul to let go of your cue stick while planning the shot. (CSI deleted this as a foul a long time ago.)
Wonder if there was any changes giving players more levity on clearing pockets or moving the starting position of their lag ball like you often see as unpopular enforcements by the EPBF referees.
 
If there are 4 balls above the head string, each player should be required to play an offensive shot that gets a ball within a 2 diamond quadrant from their own hole, or lose a ball, until there are no longer 4 balls above the head string. That would make things interesting.
 
why change the rules and how the game is played,,, for the convenience of keeping slow irritating players in the tournaments.

just tell them they are not welcome to play unless they keep up to the speed of the other players and if they dont or cant they will be punished with losses of games or worse. after the first warning.

it is easy for a t.d. to just say sorry you cant come, or when they are playing you are warned to play faster or you lose the game you are in next time i see you playing slow.
after forfeiting a game or two they will learn or leave. and if its their lively hood they will get in the program quickly.

all sports and tournaments have a penalty for playing too slow except for pool. in places with a shot clock but that shot clock gives too much time for individual shots and slow players take full time each shot which slows it down anyway.

faster play makes for more people paying for seats or streaming. so all factors benefit.
 
Chess clock -- you can only waste your own time.
One time I was doing really deep research on this one.

But when it came to field testing (at a local pro-am event) many players rejected to participate in this survey, telling the necessety to push the button every time their inning ends distracts them :rolleyes: Therefore I didn't return to that since.
 
One time I was doing really deep research on this one.

But when it came to field testing (at a local pro-am event) many players rejected to participate in this survey, telling the necessety to push the button every time their inning ends distracts them :rolleyes: Therefore I didn't return to that since.
If you don't have a problem with long matches, then it's pointless. If you do have a problem with long matches, then it is a good solution. At some point, you have to ignore the complaints if you want the event to end on time.

Only some players need to be on the clock.

Chess players deal with any distraction pretty well.

The clock forces encourages them to return to their seat as quickly as possible. This, in itself, is a tremendous advantage.

If they are new to the clock, you can have a helper remind them to push the button.
 
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