It depends on what pool you are talking about. Blackball pool has some similarity with snooker by way of the table and pockets, but the game's odd foul rules immediately put an end to those similarities.
Not quite.
I recently began playing competitive American 9-ball pool for the first time after playing only snooker. The cloth is very fast napless fabric, so you can't rely on the cloth to control the cue ball length. The cue ball is larger and heavier than the object balls. Large, tapered pockets mean that it is much easier to foul the white. A smaller table with larger balls makes American 9-ball pool quite difficult due to overcrowding if you don't have a well-practiced break-off technique (playing for cue ball shape and driving with maximum cue power is not easy). There is only one on-ball to play positioning for at a time and fouls are unforgiving ball-in-hand's, so your strategy is no longer playing for choice of reds in an open area like you would in snooker.
I just want to correct the European misconception that American pool is easy. A lot of these misconceptions could be defeated instantly the very moment a snooker player plays competitive pool. It leads me to believe that most players here are either young or are still driven by the fantastical image of potting and higher breakbuilding in snooker. Coming from a snooker background, being able to pot well in pool guarantees little more than a run of only two or three decent balls. The smaller 8-feet tables are more difficult to play for positioning on, while the standard 9-feet tables are more difficult to pot on.
Originally Posted by H.Al-Rahma
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I recently began playing competitive American 9-ball pool for the first time after playing only snooker. The cloth is very fast napless fabric, so you can't rely on the cloth to control the cue ball length. The cue ball is larger and heavier than the object balls. Large, tapered pockets mean that it is much easier to foul the white. A smaller table with larger balls makes American 9-ball pool quite difficult due to overcrowding if you don't have a well-practiced break-off technique (playing for cue ball shape and driving with maximum cue power is not easy). There is only one on-ball to play positioning for at a time and fouls are unforgiving ball-in-hand's, so your strategy is no longer playing for choice of reds in an open area like you would in snooker.
I just want to correct the European misconception that American pool is easy. A lot of these misconceptions could be defeated instantly the very moment a snooker player plays competitive pool. It leads me to believe that most players here are either young or are still driven by the fantastical image of potting and higher breakbuilding in snooker. Coming from a snooker background, being able to pot well in pool guarantees little more than a run of only two or three decent balls. The smaller 8-feet tables are more difficult to play for positioning on, while the standard 9-feet tables are more difficult to pot on.
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