Hmmm, I've watched what bit of the coverage there is on that link. Thanks for providing it. It is a shame it doesn't start from the beginning of the sequence.
However, the first Miss shown, I would suggest, is fair enough because the cue-ball hit the black further down the table from where it started. Since any catching of the jaw would bring the cue-ball towards the top cushion, I think it is fair to expect him to get the cue-ball to rebound towards top side. Perhaps if he had at least managed to make contact with the top cushion a Miss wouldn't have been called. Only Pete Williamson knows that.
Luca Brecel can actually consider himself lucky not to have had a further 7-point foul awarded for using the dead red to check the gap. I expect Williamson only failed to call it because it was being done in the context of replacing the balls rather than simply to check whether a ball would pass in the normal run of a frame.
The second Miss (of those shown on the clip) could certainly be seen as harsh, but that is not tantamount to incompetence.
The third Miss (of those shown), in which Brecel hits the blue, I think, is fair enough since you would expect him to avoid the blue - I would certainly call it a harsher call on the next occasion when he negotiated the blue but hit the green. The repositioning of the blue was poor.
(The free ball call that you were querying - was that the one during this sequence? All of these were blatantly free balls; on one occasion there was daylight between the black and red but certainly not enough for the cue-ball to hit the thinnest edge of the red.)
In the end, without having seen the first Miss, it is difficult to comment fully but on the sequence that is shown on the clip, the only arguable part is, I think, one of the calls of Miss. It is impossible to know Pete Williamson's thoughts as to what failed attempt, if any, he would have allowed to pass without a Miss being called. As I mentioned upthread, one of the non-Miss decisions I most vividly remember was one of his.
Secondly, it was certainly a poor preformance in respect of spotting the blue. However, as was acknowledged, it was certainly a tense situation for the players and for the referee and it was an extremely tricky situation.
But, one poor action and a decision of not unanimous agreement is hardly evidence, let alone proof, of either corruption or incompetence. I really thought, from the opening post, that I was going to see a situation that defied belief. What I saw, though, was an arguable degree of harshness - maybe even questionable (that's arguable in itself!) - and not much more, really.
However, the first Miss shown, I would suggest, is fair enough because the cue-ball hit the black further down the table from where it started. Since any catching of the jaw would bring the cue-ball towards the top cushion, I think it is fair to expect him to get the cue-ball to rebound towards top side. Perhaps if he had at least managed to make contact with the top cushion a Miss wouldn't have been called. Only Pete Williamson knows that.
Luca Brecel can actually consider himself lucky not to have had a further 7-point foul awarded for using the dead red to check the gap. I expect Williamson only failed to call it because it was being done in the context of replacing the balls rather than simply to check whether a ball would pass in the normal run of a frame.
The second Miss (of those shown on the clip) could certainly be seen as harsh, but that is not tantamount to incompetence.
The third Miss (of those shown), in which Brecel hits the blue, I think, is fair enough since you would expect him to avoid the blue - I would certainly call it a harsher call on the next occasion when he negotiated the blue but hit the green. The repositioning of the blue was poor.
(The free ball call that you were querying - was that the one during this sequence? All of these were blatantly free balls; on one occasion there was daylight between the black and red but certainly not enough for the cue-ball to hit the thinnest edge of the red.)
In the end, without having seen the first Miss, it is difficult to comment fully but on the sequence that is shown on the clip, the only arguable part is, I think, one of the calls of Miss. It is impossible to know Pete Williamson's thoughts as to what failed attempt, if any, he would have allowed to pass without a Miss being called. As I mentioned upthread, one of the non-Miss decisions I most vividly remember was one of his.
Secondly, it was certainly a poor preformance in respect of spotting the blue. However, as was acknowledged, it was certainly a tense situation for the players and for the referee and it was an extremely tricky situation.
But, one poor action and a decision of not unanimous agreement is hardly evidence, let alone proof, of either corruption or incompetence. I really thought, from the opening post, that I was going to see a situation that defied belief. What I saw, though, was an arguable degree of harshness - maybe even questionable (that's arguable in itself!) - and not much more, really.
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