If there are no more red balls on the table, the next legal object is the ball with the lowest points. If a hit is a foul then the other player gets penalty points: 4 points if the white ball is potted. If the wrong ball is potted first then the value of this ball.
When a hit results in more fouls then the opposing player gets the points of foul with the highest value. Penalty points have a minimal value of 4. After committing a foul the incoming player may play the ball s as they lie request to pass the shot and let the offending player play the stroke again without returning to the original position. When the only ball left on the table is the black one and The black ball is potted by the next legal shot.
The next hit is a foul. Playoff : If the scores are equal after potting the last ball, the black ball is respotted and the player on plays again from the D. The first foul or pot ends the game.
Snooker Rules 1. Aim of the game Snooker is played with fifteen object balls that are not numbered and are solid red called reds , six object balls of other colors that are not numbered called colors in snooker and a cue ball called the white ball.
Some rules apply to the turn following a foul stroke viz: After any foul shot, the player who would normally play next may choose to allow the fouling player to take the next shot, instead. If, following a foul shot, the next player is is snookered, that player may take a "free ball".
In this case, the player has the option to play any ball on the table as if it was the ball that should properly be played next. Thereafter play continues normally. So if a free ball occurs on a red, the player may play any colour as if it were a red, after which a coloured ball is nominated. The shot after that would be on a red ball if available - the yellow otherwise. If a free ball occurs on a coloured ball after all the reds are potted, the player will attempt to pot any nominated ball and the next shot will revert to the lowest value ball.
Less oft-used rules If the cue-ball ever comes to rest touching another ball, a "touching ball" is called. If the ball being touched is the ball to be played or is nominated as such by the player, then the player is counted as having played the ball already.
Regardless, the player must play away from the ball in order to avoid playing an illegal push shot. Sometimes a coloured ball that has been potted after a red cannot be returned to the table on its home spot due to being covered by another ball. In this case, the spot of the black is used or, if that is not available, the pink spot and so on down to the yellow spot. If ALL Spots are occupied, the ball is placed as close as possible its home spot on an imaginary straight line from its spot directly away from baulk.
If, with Black or Pink, there is no room to do this, the ball is placed as close as possible on an imaginary straight line from its spot towards baulk.
Less common foul shots are listed below: If the player plays a "push shot". This happens if the targeted ball is close to the cue ball and the cue tip is still in contact with the cue-ball when it strikes the target ball.
In the case of a "touching ball", the player must play away from the ball - if it moves then it is a push shot and a foul. If the cue-ball hops over the ball being aimed at, this is deemed a "jump shot" and is a foul stroke.
If the cue-ball is struck twice. If a ball is touched before it has finished rolling. If the player strikes the cue ball without at least one foot touching the floor. The End Eventually all balls except the black have been potted. At this stage, if the difference in score is more than seven points, the game ends since it is only sporting to assume that a player will not miss a direct shot and so there is no way for the losing player to win.
Otherwise, the last ball is potted in the usual way. If the game is drawn, then the black is re-spotted and the cue ball is moved to and played from anywhere within the D. The players flip a coin to decide who plays first and play continues. The player who pots the black wins the game. At any point during the game a player can resign the game. A player would normally resign when the score is such that even with all the balls and two or three snookers he would not overtake the other player.
These rules are provided by Masters Traditional Games, an Internet shop selling quality traditional games, pub games and unusual games. For general information or for copying and copyright, see our Rules Information page. Our rules are comprehensive instructions for friendly play. If in doubt, always abide by locally-played or house rules. Subscribe to Masters of Games Monthly. FAQ - which games for your pub? Games Room. Games for fairs, village fetes or school fayres - FAQ.
Filtered by:. Previous 1 2 template Next. Hi, There are a few scenarios i would be grateful to get clarified: 1 an opponent requires snookers, i make a foul resulting in a free ball to my opponent. Can he roll up tight behind his nominated ball to get me snookered. What if he goes for the pot on his nominated ball, misses and i am then snookered as a result?
I'm assuming i have to make an escape. Can my opponent make me retake if i miss a colour? I am leading by 7 points. I pot the cue ball, does the black get respotted?
If so, what happens if i pot the cue ball again? Does this slightly change if i am 25 points ahead or say 3 points behind? In 8 ball pool, black is over pocket and is my final ball. My opponent fouls and i am snookered, what can i do?
Any help would be greatly appreciated Thanks. Tags: None. Originally Posted by fatboy View Post. Comment Post Cancel. Depends on the balls on the table ,if it's only pink and black, and you have a free ball you can roll up to the black as your nominated ball and snooker them on the pink, I think.
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