Eight Ball Rules
Eight
ball is a billiards game played with a cue ball and 15 billiard balls
on a pool table with 6 pockets. There are seven solid-colored balls
numbered 1 through 7, a single black ball numbered 8, and seven striped
balls numbered 9 through 15. The cue ball is solid white. Two persons
or two teams play against each other. One plays the solid balls, the
other the striped ones. They hit the cue ball in order to hit one
of their balls and to sink one of their balls in a pocket of the table.
If they succeed, they may play again. If no balls are "pocketed",
then the shooting players turn is forfeited to the opposition. In
addition, if no balls are legally pocketed during your turn, in order
to not incur a foul and give the opposing team more of an advantage
on their next turn at the table, the shooting player must force at
least one ball on the table to make contact with one of the tables
rails. If no balls are pocketed, or sent to contact a rail, it is
a foul. If a player has sunk all the his or her balls, the player
has to sink the black 8 in order to win the game. If the black 8 is
sunk earlier, the player loses. Eight Ball is the most popular billiards
game in the United States.
Lines and points on the table
Imagine the pool table divided into two
equal halves the long way by an imaginary line (called the "long
string"). Also imagine two lines crossways to the long string
one quarter of the way from each end. These are called the "head
string" and "foot string". The intersection of the
long and head strings is called the "head spot", and the
intersection of the long and foot strings is called the "foot
spot".
Start of the game
To start the game, the colored balls are
placed in a triangle. The base of the triangle is parallel to the
short end of the pool table, the ball in the tip of the triangle
is placed on the head spot. The balls in the triangle are pressed
into contact with the head ball, and remain in contact after the
triangle is removed. The cue ball is placed anywhere the player
to break desires in the "kitchen": the "kitchen"
is the area between the foot string and its nearest short side (that
is, the quarter of the table farthest from the rack).
Break
One person is chosen to shoot first ("break"
the balls apart; note that this is a different definition of the
word "break" than in other billiards games, notably snooker)
by any number of methods: flip of a coin, loser of last game breaks,
winner of last game breaks, "lag", etc. If the shooter
who breaks fails to make a legal break (usually defined as at least
four balls hitting cushions) then the opponent can either re-rack
and break, or play from the current position.
If the breaker pockets a ball, it is still the same player's turn.
Area of substantial disagreement in rules: say the breaker pockets
the seven ball (a solid). Some people play that the breaker now
has solids as that group. Others (including the BCA) say that the
table is still "open" until someone legally pockets a
ball.
Turns
The players now take turns. The turn is
over if a player makes a fault or fails to pocket one of the object
balls.
Faults
When one player commits a fault, the other
player gets "ball in hand", that is, may place the cue
ball. Area of substantial disagreement in rules: some (including
the BCA) play that (after the break) the cueball may be placed anywhere,
and shoot at anything. Others play that the person with ball in
hand may only place the cue ball in the "kitchen", and
must shoot out of the "kitchen" before hitting any ball
(that is, they may not shoot at a ball inside the "kitchen"
directly). However, if all their balls are inside the "kitchen",
they can request that the one closest to the head string be placed
on the head spot. Under BCA rules, if the cue ball is pocketed on
the break, the cue ball must be placed in the "kitchen"
and shot out.
Other areas of substantial disagreement
in rules:
- Whether (and how) jumping the cue ball
is a fault
- Whether you lose if you:
- Shoot at the eight ball and miss
- Shoot at the eight ball, pocket the cue ball, but don't
pocket the eight ball
- Whether the players have to announce
ball and pocket
- Whether pocketing the eight ball on
the break is a win (common rule in the US) or a loss (common rule
in the UK and elsewhere)
Possible set of rules
Note: The rules for this
game may be the most contested of any billiard game; MAKE SURE that
you and your opponent agree on the rules before playing. Many people
and leagues in the USA use the Billiard Congress of America (BCA)
rules as their standard. The place where you are playing may also
have their own house rules, though you should still consult your
opponent on whether or not to play by them.
One possible set of rules follows, but
it doesn't exactly match the BCA rules:
Winning situation:
- the player has legally pocketed the
eight ball
Losing situations:
- the player plays the eight ball in
a fault situation.
- the player pockets the eight ball while
he still has object balls in his group on the table
- the player pockets the eight ball in
the same shot as the last object ball in his group
- the player has jumped the eight ball
off the table
Possible fault situations:
- the player does not execute a legal
stroke
- the player pockets the cue ball
- the player does not have at least one
foot on the floor
- the player shoots the cue ball before
all other balls have come to a complete stop
- the player hits the cue ball more than
once during a shot
- the player touches the cue ball with
something other than the tip of his cue
- the player touches any other ball
A legal stroke is defined as:
- the player hits the cue ball, then
the cue ball hits one of the balls of that player's group of balls,
then either the player pockets one of the player's own balls (not
necessarily the one hit) or any ball hits a cushion.
Differences between UK and US
In the UK version of pool or Eight Ball,
plain unnumbered red balls and yellow balls often replace the solid
and striped balls. The black ball, however, still bears a number
eight. Another difference is that the UK table has pockets just
larger than the balls, whereas the American table has pockets significantly
larger.
After a foul stroke in the UK, the offending
player will miss a turn - known as the "two shots" rule.
A common exception to this is "one shot on the black",
that is a player who has only the black left to pot does not get
this advantage.
Source: Webster-Dictionary.org
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