Hi,
I would like to ask the opinion from the members here about something that happened to me.
We were practicing and it was very casual. He was just sitting around chatting to his friends when I was shooting and I was spotting my own balls pretty much all the time, and nothing was at stake.
It was a friendly game of a best of three. It was in a club whereas there were lots of traffic around the table, as it was in a veteran's club (like a working men's club), not a real snooker club.
Anyway, the score was 1-1, and I was standing behind a pole about 5-10 feet by the green spot, when my opponent was shooting his balls around the black. He made a black, was on a red shooting with his back facing me. I went to the bar, and gripped a piece of towel to wipe down my cue. When i returned, he just finished shooting that red, and was on a pink to the black pocket. I stood at the same spot, around the green pocket, about 10 feet away from the table, behind a pole, to pretty much stay out of his way.
He missed the pink, then turned to me and asked "why did you leave the table?"
I told him I wanted to get a towel from the bar, and I was only away for the amount of time it took him to make one red, I was behind him standing behind a pole, I did not move in front of him, and I did not make any sound. We played three frames and it was the first time I left the table.
He said I was not allowed to do that and he went on to suggest that "I should know better" which then implied that I was doing that on purpose to distract him.
I told him it was an informal game, he did not even spot my balls, and I had to keep track of my scores, and he stood in front of me a few times, and now he all the sudden wanted to enforce this one rule about me having to stay around the table at all time? If he wanted to follow the rules to the letters, I told him, I do not mind, but it has to be fair and all rules should be followed, not only the one rule he deemed to be important.
He did not want to do that, but kept complaining about me distracting him.
At that point, I asked him what in the world he was doing trying to see where I was when he was down on a shot and should be focusing on making the ball. He said my not being there does something to mess up his head and he said "I should know better."
This person is a century breaker, and he has been playing for may be over 20 years.
I won that frame and he started to accuse me of "sharking" him again after the game was over.
Is he just trying to find an excuse about losing, or was I wrong?
What is the usual etiquette in informal games?
Please comment, thanks.
I would like to ask the opinion from the members here about something that happened to me.
We were practicing and it was very casual. He was just sitting around chatting to his friends when I was shooting and I was spotting my own balls pretty much all the time, and nothing was at stake.
It was a friendly game of a best of three. It was in a club whereas there were lots of traffic around the table, as it was in a veteran's club (like a working men's club), not a real snooker club.
Anyway, the score was 1-1, and I was standing behind a pole about 5-10 feet by the green spot, when my opponent was shooting his balls around the black. He made a black, was on a red shooting with his back facing me. I went to the bar, and gripped a piece of towel to wipe down my cue. When i returned, he just finished shooting that red, and was on a pink to the black pocket. I stood at the same spot, around the green pocket, about 10 feet away from the table, behind a pole, to pretty much stay out of his way.
He missed the pink, then turned to me and asked "why did you leave the table?"
I told him I wanted to get a towel from the bar, and I was only away for the amount of time it took him to make one red, I was behind him standing behind a pole, I did not move in front of him, and I did not make any sound. We played three frames and it was the first time I left the table.
He said I was not allowed to do that and he went on to suggest that "I should know better" which then implied that I was doing that on purpose to distract him.
I told him it was an informal game, he did not even spot my balls, and I had to keep track of my scores, and he stood in front of me a few times, and now he all the sudden wanted to enforce this one rule about me having to stay around the table at all time? If he wanted to follow the rules to the letters, I told him, I do not mind, but it has to be fair and all rules should be followed, not only the one rule he deemed to be important.
He did not want to do that, but kept complaining about me distracting him.
At that point, I asked him what in the world he was doing trying to see where I was when he was down on a shot and should be focusing on making the ball. He said my not being there does something to mess up his head and he said "I should know better."
This person is a century breaker, and he has been playing for may be over 20 years.
I won that frame and he started to accuse me of "sharking" him again after the game was over.
Is he just trying to find an excuse about losing, or was I wrong?
What is the usual etiquette in informal games?
Please comment, thanks.
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