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General
Rules
These general rules apply to all
pocket billiard games, UNLESS specifically
noted to the contrary in the individual
game rules.
TABLES, BALLS, EQUIPMENT
All games described in these rules are designed for tables, balls and equipment meeting the standards prescribed in the BCA Equipment Specifications.
RACKING THE BALLS
When racking the balls a triangle must be used, and the apex ball is to be spotted on the foot spot. All the balls must be lined up behind the apex ball and pressed together so that they all have contact with each other.
STRIKING CUE BALL
Legal shots require that the cue ball be struck only with the cue tip. Failure to meet this requirement is a foul.
CALLING SHOTS
For games of call-shot a player
may shoot any ball he chooses,
but before he shoots, must
designate the called ball
and called pocket. He need
not indicate any detail such as kisses, caroms,
combinations, or cushions
(all of which are legal).
Any additionally pocketed
ball(s) on a legal stroke is counted in the shooter's
favor.
FAILURE TO POCKET A BALL
If a player fails to pocket
a ball on a legal shot, then
the player's inning is over,
and it is the opponent's
turn at the table.
LAG FOR BREAK
The following procedure is used for the lag for the opening break. Each player should use balls of equal size and weight (preferably cue balls but, when not available, non-striped object balls). With the balls in hand behind the head string, one player to the left and one to the right of the head spot, the balls are shot simultaneously to the foot cushion and back to the head end of the table. The player whose ball is the closest to the innermost edge of the head cushion wins the lag. The lagged ball must contact the foot cushion at least once. Other cushion contacts are immaterial, except as prohibited below. It is an automatic loss of the lag if:
1- The ball crosses into the opponent's
half of the table
2- The ball fails to contact the foot
cushion
3- The ball drops into a pocket
4- The ball jumps off the table
5- The ball touches the long cushion
6- The ball rests within the corner
pocket and past the nose of the head
cushion, or
7- The ball contacts the foot rail
more than once. If both players violate
automatic-loss lag rules, or if the
referee is unable to determine which ball
is closer, the lag is a tie and is
replayed.
OPENING BREAK SHOT
The opening break shot is determined by either lag or lot. (The lag for break procedure is required for formal competition.) The player winning the lag or lot has the choice of performing the opening break shot or assigning it to the opponent.
CUE BALL ON OPENING BREAK
The opening break shot is taken with cue ball in hand behind the head string. The object balls are positioned according to specific game rules. On the opening break, the game is considered to have commenced once the cue ball has been struck by the cue tip.
DEFLECTING THE CUE BALL ON THE GAME'S OPENING BREAK
On the break shot, stopping or deflecting the
cue ball after it has crossed
the head string and prior to
hitting the racked balls is considered
a foul and loss of turn. The
opponent has the option of receiving
cue ball in hand behind the head
string or passing the cue ball
in hand behind the head string
back to the offending player..
A warning must be given that
a second violation during the
match will result in the loss
of the match by forfeiture.
CUE BALL IN HAND BEHIND THE HEAD STRING
This situation applies in specific games whereby
the opening break is administered or a player's scratching
is penalized by the incoming
player having cue ball in hand behind the head string. The incoming
player may place the cue ball anywhere
behind the head string. The shooting
player may shoot at any object ball as long as the base of the object
ball is on or below the head
string. He may not shoot at any
ball, the base of which is above the head string, unless he first
shoots the cue ball below the head
string and then by hitting a
rail causes the cue ball to come back above the head string and hit
the object ball. The base of the ball
(the point of the ball touching
the table) determines whether it is above or below the head string.
If the incoming player inadvertently
places the cue ball on or below
the head string, the referee or the opposing player must inform the
shooting player of improper positioning
of the cue ball before the shot
is made. If the opposing player does not so inform the shooting player
before the shot is made, the shot
is considered legal. If the shooting
player is informed of improper positioning, he must then reposition
the cue ball. If a player positions
the cue ball completely and obviously
outside the kitchen and shoots the cue ball, it is a foul. When the
cue ball is in hand behind the
head string, it remains in hand
(not in play) until the player strikes the cue ball with his cue
tip. The cue ball may be adjusted by the
player's hand, cue, etc., so
long as it remains in hand. Once the cue ball
is in play per the above, it
may not be impeded in any way
by the player to do so is to commit a foul. Additionally, if the
shot fails
to contact a legal object ball
or fails to drive the cue ball
over the head string, the shot is a foul and the opposing player
has ball
in hand according to the specific
game rules.
POCKETED BALLS
A ball is considered pocketed if as a result of an otherwise legal shot, it drops off the bed of the table into the pocket and remains there. (A ball that drops out of a ball return system onto the floor is not to be construed as a ball that has not remained pocketed.) A ball that rebounds from a pocket back onto the table bed is not a pocketed ball.
POSITION OF BALLS
The position of a ball is judged by where its base (or center) rests.
FOOT ON FLOOR
Player must have at least one foot in contact with the floor at the moment the cue tip contacts the cue ball, or the shot is a foul. Foot attire must be normal in regard to size, shape and manner in which it is worn.
SHOOTING WITH BALLS IN MOTION
It is a foul if a player shoots while the cue ball or any object ball is in motion (a spinning ball is in motion).
COMPLETION OF STROKE
A stroke is not complete (and therefore is not counted) until all balls on the table have become motionless after the stroke (a spinning ball is in motion).
HEAD STRING DEFINED
The area behind the head string does not include the head string. Thus, an object ball that is dead center on the head string is playable when specific game rules require that a player must shoot at a ball past the head string. Likewise, the cue ball when being put in play behind the head string (cue ball in hand behind the head string), may not be placed directly on the head string it must be behind it.
GENERAL RULE, ALL FOULS
Though the penalties for fouls differ from game to game, the following apply to all fouls:
1- Player's inning ends
2- If on a stroke,
the stroke is invalid and any
pocketed balls are not counted
to the shooter.
3- Any ball(s)
is re-spotted only if the rules
of the specific game require it.
FAILURE TO CONTACT OBJECT BALL
It is a foul if on a stroke the cue ball fails to make contact with any legal object ball first. Playing away from a touching ball does not constitute having hit that ball.
LEGAL SHOT
Unless otherwise stated in a specific game rule, a player must cause the cue ball to contact a legal object ball and then:
1- Pocket a numbered ball, or
2- Cause the cue ball
or any numbered ball to contact
a cushion or any part of the
rail. Failure to meet these requirements is a foul.
CUE BALL SCRATCH
It is a foul (scratch) if on a stroke, the cue ball is pocketed. If the cue ball touches an object ball that was already pocketed (for example, in a pocket full of object balls), the shot is a foul.
FOULS BY TOUCHING BALLS
It is a foul to strike, touch or in any way make contact with the cue ball in play or any object balls in play with anything (the body, clothing, chalk, mechanical bridge, cue shaft, etc.) except the cue tip (while attached to the cue shaft), which may contact the cue ball in the execution of a legal shot. Whenever a referee is presiding over a match, any object ball moved during a standard foul must be returned as closely as possible to its original position as judged by the referee, and the incoming player does not have the option of restoration.
FOUL BY PLACEMENT
Touching any object ball with the cue ball while it is in hand is a foul.
FOULS BY DOUBLE HITS
If the cue ball is touching the required object ball prior to the shot, the player may shoot toward it, providing that any normal stroke is employed. If the cue stick strikes the cue ball more than once on a shot, or if the cue stick is in contact with the cue ball when or after the cue ball contacts an object ball, the shot is a foul. If a third ball is close by, care should be taken not to foul that ball under the first part of this rule.
PUSH SHOT FOULS
It is a foul if the cue ball is pushed by the cue tip, with contact being maintained for more than the momentary time commensurate with a stroked shot. (Such shots are usually referred to as push shots.)
PLAYER RESPONSIBILITY FOULS
The player is responsible for chalk, bridges, files and any other items or equipment he brings to, uses at, or causes to approximate the table. If he drops a piece of chalk, or knocks off a mechanical bridge head, as examples, he is guilty of a foul should such an object make contact with any ball in play (or the cue ball only if no referee is presiding over the match).
ILLEGAL JUMPING OF BALL
It is a foul if a player strikes the cue ball
below center (&ldquo digs under&rdquo or &ldquo loftsthe
cue ball) and intentionally causes
it to rise off the bed of the
table in an effort to clear an
obstructing ball. Such jumping
action may occasionally occur accidentally, and such jumps are
not to be considered fouls on
their face they may still be
ruled foul strokes, if for example,
the ferrule or cue shaft makes
contact with the cue ball in
the course of the shot.
JUMP SHOTS
Unless otherwise stated in rules for a specific game it is legal to cause the cue ball to rise off the bed of the table by elevating the cue stick on the shot, and forcing the cue ball to rebound from the bed of the table. Any miscue when executing a jump shot is a foul.
BALLS JUMPED OFF TABLE
Balls coming to rest other than on the bed of the table after a stroke (on the cushion top, rail surface, floor, etc.) are considered jumped balls. Balls may bounce on the cushion tops and rails of the table in play without being jumped balls if they return to the bed of the table under their own power and without touching anything not a part of the table. The table shall consist of the permanent part of the table proper. (Balls that strike or touch anything not a part of the table, such as the light fixture, chalk on the rails and cushion tops, etc., shall be considered jumped balls even though they might return to the bed of the table after contacting items which are not parts of the table proper). In all pocket billiard games, when a stroke results in the cue ball or any object ball being a jumped ball off the table, the stroke is a foul. All jumped object balls are spotted (except in 8 and 9-Ball) when all balls have stopped moving. See specific game rules for putting the cue ball in play after a jumped cue ball foul.
SPECIAL INTENTIONAL FOUL PENALTY
The cue ball in play shall not be intentionally
struck with anything other than
a cue's attached tip (such as
the ferrule, shaft, etc.). While such contact is automatically a
foul under the provisions of Rule Legal Shot, if
the referee deems the contact to be intentional, he shall warn the
player once during a match that a second violation during that match
will result in the loss of the match by forfeiture. If a second violation
does occur, the match must be forfeited.
ONE FOUL LIMIT
Unless specific game rules dictate otherwise, only one foul is assessed on a player in each inning if different penalties can apply, the most severe penalty is the factor determining which foul is assessed.
BALLS MOVING SPONTANEOUSLY
If a ball shifts, settles, turns or otherwise
moves by itself, the ball shall
remain in the position it assumed
and play continues. A hanging ball that falls into
a pocket by
itself after being motionless
for 5 seconds or longer shall
be replaced as closely as possible
to its position prior to falling, and play shall continue. If an
object ball drops into a pocket
by itself as a player shoots
at it, so that the cue ball passes
over the
spot the ball had been on, unable
to hit it, the cue ball and object
ball are to be replaced to their
positions prior to the stroke,
and the player may shoot again.
Any other object balls disturbed
on the stroke are also to be replaced
to their original positions before
the shooter replays.
SPOTTING BALLS
When specific game rules call for spotting
balls, they shall be replaced
on the table on the long string
after the stroke is complete.
A single ball is placed on the foot spot
if more than one ball is to be
spotted, they are placed on the
long string in ascending numerical
order, beginning on the foot spot and
advancing toward the foot rail.
When balls on or near the foot
spot or long string interfere
with the spotting of balls, the balls to
be spotted are placed on the
extension of the long string
in front of the foot spot (between
the foot spot and the center
spot), as near as possible to
the foot spot and in the same numerical order as if they were spotted behindthe
foot spot (lowest numbered ball
closest to the foot spot).
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JAWED BALLS
If two or more balls are locked between the
jaws or sides of the pocket, with
one or more suspended in air, the
referee shall inspect the balls in
position and follow this procedure:
he shall visually (or physically if he desires) project each ball
directly downward from its locked
position any ball that in his judgement
would fall in the pocket if so moved
directly downward is a pocketed ball,
while any ball that would come to
rest on the bed of the table
is not pocketed. The balls are then
placed according to the referee's
assessment, and play continues according
to specific game rules as if no locking or jawing of balls
had occurred.
ADDITIONAL POCKETED BALLS
If extra balls are pocketed on a legal scoring stroke, they are counted in accord with the scoring rules for the particular game.
NON-PLAYER INTERFERENCE
If the balls are moved (or a player bumped such
that play is directly affected) by
a non-player during the match, the
balls shall be replaced as near as possible to their original
positions immediately prior to the
incident, and play shall resume with
no penalty on the player affected. If the match is officiated,
the referee shall replace the balls.
This rule also applies to act of
God interferences, such as earthquakes, hurricanes,
light fixture falling, power failures,
etc. If the balls cannot be restored to their original positions,
replay the game with the original
player breaking. This rule is not
applicable to 14.1 Continuous where the game consists of successive
racks: the rack in progress will
be discontinued and a completely
new rack will be started with the
requirements of the normal opening
break (players lag for break). Scoring
of points is to be resumed at the
score as it stood at the moment of game disruption.
BREAKING SUBSEQUENT RACKS
In a match that consists of short rack games, the winner of each game breaks in the next. The following are common options that may be designated by tournament officials in advance:
1- Players alternate break.
2- Loser breaks.
3- Player trailing in game count
breaks the next game.
PLAY BY INNINGS
During the course of play, players alternate
turns (innings) at the table,
with a player's inning ending
when he either fails to legally pocket a ball, or fouls. When an
inning ends free of a foul, the
incoming player accepts the table
in position.
OBJECT BALL FROZEN TO CUSHION OR CUE BALL
This rule applies to any shot where the cue
ball's first contact with a ball
is with one that is frozen to
a cushion or to the cue ball itself. After the cue ball makes
contact with the frozen object
ball, the shot must result in
either:
1- A ball being pocketed, or
2- The cue ball contacting
a cushion, or
3- The frozen ball
being caused to contact a cushion
attached to a separate rail,
or
4- Another object
ball being caused to contact
a cushion with which it was not
already in contact.
Failure to satisfy one of those four requirements is a foul. (Note: 14.1 and other games specify additional requirements and applications of this rule see specific game rules.) A ball which is touching a cushion at the start of a shot and then is forced into a cushion attached to the same rail is not considered to have been driven to that cushion unless it leaves the cushion, contacts another ball, and then contacts the cushion again. An object ball is not considered frozen to a cushion unless it is examined and announced as such by either the referee or one of the players prior to that object ball being involved in a shot.
PLAYING FROM BEHIND THE STRING
When a player has the cue ball in hand behind the head string (in the kitchen), he must drive the cue ball to a point across the head string before it contacts either a cushion, an object ball, or returns to the kitchen. Failure to do so is a foul if a referee is presiding over a match. If no referee, the opponent has the option to call it either a foul or to require the offending player to replay the shot again with the balls restored to their positions prior to the shot (and with no foul penalty imposed). Exception: if an object ball lies on or outside the head string (and is thus playable) but so close that the cue ball contacts it before the cue ball is out of the kitchen, the ball can be legally played, and will be considered to have crossed the head string. If, with cue ball in hand behind the headstring and while the shooter is attempting a legitimate shot, the cue ball accidentally hits a ball behind the head string, and the cue ball crosses the line, it is a foul. If with cue ball in hand behind the head string, the shooter causes the cue ball to hit an object ball accidentally, and the cue ball does not cross the headstring, the following applies: the incoming player has the option of calling a foul and having cue ball in hand, or having the balls returned to their original position, and having the offending player replay the shot. If a player under the same conditions intentionally causes the cue ball to contact an object ball behind the headstring, it is unsportsmanlike conduct.
CUE BALL IN HAND FOUL
During cue ball in hand placement, the player may use his hand or any part of his cue (including the tip) to position the cue ball. When placing the cue ball in position, any forward stroke motion of the cue stick contacting the cue ball will be considered a foul if not a legal shot.
INTERFERENCE
If the non-shooting player distracts his opponent or interferes with his play, he has fouled. If a player shoots out of turn, or moves any ball except during his inning, it is considered to be interference.
DEVICES
Players are not allowed to use a ball, the triangle or any other width-measuring device to see if the cue ball or an object ball would travel through a gap, etc. Only the cue stick may be used as an aid to judge gaps or as an aid to aligning a shot, so long as the cue is held by the hand. To do so otherwise is a foul and unsportsmanlike conduct.
ILLEGAL MARKING
If a player intentionally marks the table in any way (including the placement of chalk) to assist in executing the shot, it is a foul.
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Any modification or sale of the information herein is strictly prohibited
by the laws governing that copyright. Please direct questions regarding
interpretation of the following, or information on how to receive
the current BCA Official Rules & Records Handbook to the Billiard
Congress of America at 4345 Beverly St., Suite D, Colorado Springs,
CO 80918. Phone: 719.264.8300, Fax: 719.264.0900.
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