Originally Posted by snookersfun
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I think I've heard somewhere before (maybe I've dreamed it tho) that a ref can 'move' the whole situation of balls to another table if necessary. So, I'll go for something like: A frame is in progress and suddenly the water-pipe directly above the table ruptures and water is dripping onto the table. One of the players leads by let's say 40 points and doesn't want a re-rack, so the ref has to transfer all the remaining balls to another table and re-establish the situation as it was when the match was interrupted.
I find this a very creative suggestion, btw.
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Originally Posted by snookersfun...can be played from the D in that case, me thinks"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
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Originally Posted by The StatmanStill no correct answer – a clue: the referee would move the cue-ball (most likely), but only a minuscule amount.
I think I've seen the referee slightly move a ball to enable him to get to another ball.
i.e. He is asked to clean the pink, which is in the middle of all the reds, so to avoid moving all the reds, he will move one to allow access to the pink through a gap...
A certain amount of straw-clutching going on here now
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Originally Posted by The StatmanRambon, your analogy with cleaning (or indeed spotting) the pink, requiring him to remove another ball that is impeding him, is a good one, but not right.
Another clue. It will always be either the cue-ball or a ball that is very, very close to the cue-ball.
Is it if the cue ball is being touched by balls in such a way that it would be impossible to play a shot without playing a push shot?
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Originally Posted by CyrilWhen a coloured ball is re-spotted it cannot be touching another ball. Sometimes, though, the ref will spot a ball and then it will 'move' slightly on the cloth so that it is touching another ball. The ref will then move them slightly apart again.
I feel we will get there soon, the point going to the first person who can be bothered to read throught the rules!
I have never known this situation come up, until Sunday when I was refereeing the Dorset Amateur final.
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