Yapp winning, with a foul! Just like Maradona making a goal with his hands :D

I get this. You tube no less. Still, claiming absolute foul with no forensic evidence is disturbing.
On the WNTTV website it still looks like a foul with better video bitrate available, not just on YouTube with lower bitrate. It would have been hard for a referee to notice it, or a player to perhaps noticed it happened. The 9 ball did not move long enough for a player shooting looking at the pocket to pick up on their own that the 9 ball moved. The impact occurred at the same time the cue hit the object ball making it tough for a player to call a foul on themselves. Yapp probably thought it was a good hit at the time since he knew the ref was watching and made no call.
 
On the WNTTV website it still looks like a foul with better video bitrate available, not just on YouTube with lower bitrate. It would have been hard for a referee to notice it, or a player to perhaps noticed it happened. The 9 ball did not move long enough for a player shooting looking at the pocket to pick up on their own that the 9 ball moved. The impact occurred at the same time the cue hit the object ball making it tough for a player to call a foul on themselves. Yapp probably thought it was a good hit at the time since he knew the ref was watching and made no call.
Funny. I'm 51 / 49 no foul so what Yapp thought at the time isn't even a point of concern. There are many anomalies in the slomo "proof" clip. At presented speed, the stroke looks faster than it should be and the ball does jog as if fouled.
At frame x frame, there is no movement at the possible contact and the motion of the ball seems controlled by the shadow of the stick only. Enough doubt for me.
 
The movement of the nineball could have been caused by the table cloth moving under the applied tension of his fingers on the cloth. I’m not sure how that gets ruled on if that’s is the case?
We've all seen hanging balls Yoda' d in after catching their breath and rules have been created to deal with "spontaneous motion". Right now the best possibility for that is the strike on the cue ball itself. But that's just guessing at it.
 
On the WNTTV website it still looks like a foul with better video bitrate available, not just on YouTube with lower bitrate. It would have been hard for a referee to notice it, or a player to perhaps noticed it happened. The 9 ball did not move long enough for a player shooting looking at the pocket to pick up on their own that the 9 ball moved. The impact occurred at the same time the cue hit the object ball making it tough for a player to call a foul on themselves. Yapp probably thought it was a good hit at the time since he knew the ref was watching and made no call.
Nah, you feel everything the cue does. There's no way he didn't "feel it" but without seeing the 9 ball move, he probably didn't recognize it as a foul. I can assure you he "felt" it, I'm not saying he did something nefarious, I am saying he felt it, but with the small distance the ball "tipped" he may not have recognized it, what i can assure you is that he felt it. Hope somebody asks him, if he's as honest as we all believe him to be, he will admit he felt it.

When this happens, you all owe us apologies
 
Had Fedor noticed the oscillation of the 9ball, he could have requested a video review of the shot (for you old timers, this happened very late in the Darryl Peach vs Francisco Bustamante World 9ball semifinal in 2007 and the original call was changed.) Unfortunately, unless somebody deems the shot worthy of review, it will not be reviewed, and in this case nobody did.
Pro tennis players often challenge line calls near the end of the match or on match point--because they have nothing to lose. If WNT rules allow players to challenge a shot and the refs are allowed to look at replays, then a good end of match strategy would be to challenge any shot where an opponent's cue stick or hand (or other body part) comes close to a ball.
 
  • Love
Reactions: sjm
Pro tennis players often challenge line calls near the end of the match or on match point--because they have nothing to lose. If WNT rules allow players to challenge a shot and the refs are allowed to look at replays, then a good end of match strategy would be to challenge any shot where an opponent's cue stick or hand (or other body part) comes close to a ball.
I'd impose a time limit like they do in cricket. 15 seconds to challenge a call and use the DRS. Otherwise sit down and shut up. They get a set amount of referrals, if the challenge is inconclusive, they lose the referral. If the challenge is upheld, they maintain the ability to refer.

Works very well in cricket.
 
Nah, you feel everything the cue does. There's no way he didn't "feel it" but without seeing the 9 ball move, he probably didn't recognize it as a foul. I can assure you he "felt" it, I'm not saying he did something nefarious, I am saying he felt it, but with the small distance the ball "tipped" he may not have recognized it, what i can assure you is that he felt it. Hope somebody asks him, if he's as honest as we all believe him to be, he will admit he felt it.

When this happens, you all owe us apologies
Jayson Shaw had his original straight pool high run got reduced from 714 to 669 when the BCA claimed a ball moved early in the run which I believe Shaw did not think occurred, so it can happen where a player does not recognize that it happened.

 
Jayson Shaw had his original straight pool high run got reduced from 714 to 669 when the BCA claimed a ball moved early in the run which I believe Shaw did not think occurred, so it can happen where a player does not recognize that it happened.

Too much vibration in the cue to deny it happened. I promise you he felt it, I'm a Shaw fan and I still believe he felt it.
 
I saw the same video on reddit but slowed down and zoom in. Even the eight wobbles appears to wobbles slighty... So I am very questionning If he didn't just shake the table on this shot, of it's the camera that wobbles.

If it was a foul, I am really OK that the ref didn't saw and call it. But the ref shouldn't have miss this one [edit: on smartphone I was sure the eight was moved by his arm. I am not sure on computer]
 
Last edited:
Back
Top