When you're in a literally impossible snooker (i.e. can't directly hit any cushion), like Jones was in, you're required to shoot directly at an object ball, regardless of what other balls are in the way. The ref does not then call a miss, and play continues with a foul. It's in the rules, there's no ambiguity about. The ref handled that Holt situation terribly, Jones played it exactly the way it's supposed to be played.
@@itsmegeorgeous But he had to swerve it to hit the cushion, which means he couldn't hit it directly, couldn't hit it with any variation in pace and couldn't hit it with a controlled amount of side off the cushion. What he did (twice) is the only thing it was possible to do, except play direct at a ball in the way Jones did. It should never have been called a miss first time.
@@dislecsyk991 he has to jack the cue up to apply the side that is necessary to hit the bottom cushion. That doesn't mean he couldn't hit the side cushion directly without doing so.
@@itsmegeorgeous Yeah, to be fair, it's impossible to tell if he could have got to the cushion without the swerve, so I'll concede on that. Still think the ref got it wrong in calling a miss on the first attempt, though.
@@dislecsyk991 this actually isn't the rule. I just went online to check: "a situation exists where it is impossible to hit the ball on. In the latter case it must be assumed the striker is attempting to hit the ball on provided that he plays, directly or indirectly, at the ball on with sufficient strength, in the referee‟s opinion, to have reached the ball on but for the obstructing ball or balls." I think you missed the 'directly or indirectly' bit, as you've described only the 'directly' case.
I think in general snooker is a very gentlemanly sport compared to others. Players frequently call out their own fouls, rarely argue with the ref (and if so, they're polite about it), etc.
@@yuanheli307 Sure. Like I say, _in general_ , not always. It's still a far cry from sports like football, featuring diving and players aggressively getting in the referee's face.
@@MijinLaw there have been some of acts of bad sportsmanship over recent years - selby is the main culprit but you have allen not calling a foul on himself - mcgills performance against clarke -ebdon screaming and shouting etc carter barging into ronnie etc, the quinten hann saga
Marco being a gent saying it's not a miss. If only Bingham had the respect he should have. The miss rule was put in place for people taking advantage missing balls deliberately. Please use that as a guideline refs...
Simon the way holt played the shot it was a miss every time, holt has to nominate the green and push through the reds with sufficient pace to reach the green for it to not be called a miss. Thats the difference between the clips
He was stuck between the reds. The shot he played was a push shot, so a foul if he did or didn't hit the green.
6 років тому+15
A miss shouldn't be called on the first shot because it is a very delicate situation, Bingham should step in and try to convince the referee that it is almost impossible to escape from there.
GTKomissaR Because it's amazing how he even called the first miss. Then Stuart stepping in saying he should leave something on just boggles my mind. I'm startled by the whole situation and the lack of respect from Bingham. It wasn't even him who played the snooker.. Goes to show the great sportmanship of some players.
In my opinion the ref should always call a miss. If you seriously cannot hit an object ball then you're stuck having to leave your opponent a shot he will take or concede the frame. I can't see why that's so terrible, and it's certainly less divisive than allowing the ref to subjectively decide whether he should call the miss or not. If you pot the white the ref doesn't get to decide that it's not a foul just because you made a valiant attempt or were stuck with a bad shot, he shouldn't have that option with a miss either.
Jones' shot was an outstanding shot. As I understand the rules, if it is impossible to escape a snooker, you have to aim directly at a legal ball with enough pace that you would hit it if there was nothing in the way, and in doing so you avoid the "miss" being called. Fair play to Fu for agreeing it was indeed an impossible escape, although it clearly was, and any ref would see that. For Jones to not leave an easy red, and get the cue ball to baulk, that was outrageous.
You are correct, but what you describe only apply, when you have to hit a colour. Jones puts a red and then has to put a colour, and then the rule you describe apply :-)
@@enkaan1676 Still Marco can put him back in again as you can do after every foul. Advantage gone. I know what you mean though. He can chose the lesser evil so to speak if he has the choice between definitely leaving something or having to play a possibly difficult safety next.
@@enkaan1676 every time a player hits a shot in snooker he's trying to 'gain an advantage' while abiding to the rules of the game. Jones did this. What you blathering on about?
First case:bingham is saying to holt “try once maybee its possible”. Second case:fu is accepting that its impossible to hit a colour. In both case there’s finally (thow different cases)a gentleman’s agreement,ONLY in snooker!!! But i love among all the procedure:first the player look at is opponent by saying “i can not escape”, then his opponent has to agree with him.but its not enough:he has to turn to the judge and receiving his agreement too. And then the judge goes and talk to the opponent by asking him what would be the shot he would be quite happy with without calling a “miss rule”. That’s why I LOVE SNOOKER so much,its a gentlemen’s(and ladies)game.
Bingham isn't a gentleman. Follow the conversation. He wanted him to leave something on, then he'd agree not to call it a miss. That's why you hear Holt complaining about the miss rule. He had a safety, but chose to get some free points.
bingham only took the shot because there was a red on, not that he's being a gentleman. He was one if he did what Marco did and say that there's no way to hit a color and that it should be a foul, not a miss, as long as Michael try to make a shot in his best effort.
it's all about the miss rule and the discretion the referee can exercise when a player is in a extremely difficult snooker. In the first case the referee should have exercised it but didnt not. You can know more by reading others' comments.
Is the ref really saying to Holt in the first clip that a miss will be called until he leaves something on for Bingham? If so that shows a complete failure to understand the miss rule by a professional referee...
@richjhart; Yeah, I believe you are correct- if Holt leaves Bingham with an easy starting red the ref won't call a miss as Holt obviously hasn't gained an advantage by missing.... it would actually be the opposite with Bingham gaining the advantage so to call a miss wouldn't be needed (it is obvious anyway that Holt is trying his hardest to escape, there should be no miss called wherever the white ends up, easy red or not)
I disagree. Holt was the one who messed up in the first place to get himself in that situation, so under no circumstances should Holt be the one to prosper from his next shot, genuine attempt to escape or not. Only if the shot gives the advantage to his opponent (i.e. leaving a red on) should the shot not be called a miss. Otherwise, someone can mess up and still end up with the advantage, which wouldn't be fair.
@@fredjimbob2962 Fairness has nothing to do with the miss rule, and for good reason: There is no independent measure of what is fair or not fair; it is a highly emotive judgement which varies wildly from person to person. Run of the ball is a well understood component of snooker and every player goes into the game knowing it well -- there's no need to try to legislate against it in the rulebook.
@@jonobrow True but there's no independent measure of whether a shot is a genuine attempt, probably even more so. And I agree, a miss should not be called if this was an attempt to escape from a snooker, given the difficulty, but this was a position Holt got himself into which I think is a different situation. To say that your opponent should be put in a difficult situation because of your own mistake would be open to abuse, someone could just commit a foul and leave their opponent with no shot because no miss would be called.
@@Buggaton what if the opposing player is then left with a very difficult shot to either pot a red or get the cue ball safe? Bit unfair to be put in that position from an opponent's foul. PS I'm aware that it's a free ball if you're snookered from a foul.
@@XaviRonaldo0 Good question but I'd say; that player can opt to make his opponent play the next shot. As one can do after any foul. Just not replacing all the balls.
@@XaviRonaldo0 you're supposed to try and leave your opponent in a difficult position 🤦🏻♂️ 😂 as you say you can't snooker someone from a foul but you don't need to make it easy for them.
In a situation like this the player should make an attempt to hit a colour, a good way to do it is to act as if there are no red balls blocking a colour and there is a line to hit a ball. Then they play the shot with enough power to hit the colour otherwise a miss is called. This prevents tapping a red gently. EDIT: a miss shouldn't have been called in my opinion since holt made a clear attempt to hit a colour with no tactical advantages
I don't think you can compare both situations identically. Holt was able to hit a cushion without hitting a red as seen in the video while it was impossible for Jones to miss a red from that position. However, both were unable to hit a color either way. I agree with how the situation was addressed by Fu with the referee. It's going to be a foul, inevitably, but a miss should not be given on any sort of attempt to get out of the situation.
That first ref doesn't even know the rules! At least the second one got it right, the player should know the rules though he's supposed to be a professional
@@enumeration Marco Fu suggested the green, Jones didn't say anything thus constituting a foul which incurs a penalty of 7 points as soon as he played the white ball.
@@nightattheoscars You don't actually have to nominate the ball out loud, so long as it is obvious which ball you are going for (imagine there only being the black on the table and you line up a straight shot and the ref says foul because you didn't *say* black). Since they had a discussion with the ref where they decided he would hit it towards the green, the ref knows which ball he is going for.
@@enumeration It was not up to Marco to decide what shot to play for Jones. Jones should have definitely declared to the referee verbally his intended colour. Foul 7 away.
It is my understanding that "foul and a miss" is declared by the referee when there's a realistic possibility of hitting the "on" ball, but in the referee's view the player did not do enough effort to do so. However, I have seen dozens and dozens of times almost impossible snooker situations where it would take almost literally a superhuman feat to get out of it without a foul... yet the referee keeps calling "foul and a miss" again and again, even though the player _very clearly_ is trying his best to not to foul. I never understood that.
What you're missing, is one of two possibilities. Sometimes, it's that it's not about whether there's a realistic possibility of hitting the ball they're going for, but when there's a realistic possibility of hitting any ball on. Sometimes what you're not seeing is there's a slightly easier ball or tactic in the ref's point of view the player could be going for, even off a cushion, but the player doesn't want to go for because it would put their opponent in a poor position, and it's worth the risk of giving your opponent some foul points to attempt to avoid. If they went for the easiest ball on in the refs point of view, it likely wouldn't be a miss if they missed it. The second possibility, which was why the first shot was called a miss with Bingham, is that It's usually deemed a miss to be on the safe side when it doesn't leave the opponent with a shot, as it's hard to tell the difference between an intentional foul and snooker and an unintentional one.
IIRC the other player is entitled to a foul and a miss if the person takes a shot and fouls. If the player is not snookered from an available ball, after 2 fouls and a miss, the referee will warn him that if he does it a third time, he’ll lose the frame. If he is snookered however, he will not get that warning.
Well, it's one thing if the fouls are a result of a very clever snooker - then I see it as well-earned points to have them repeat a couple of times. The game is, after all, called “Snooker”! But if a player fluked themselves snookered, then the end-of-break and foul points really should be punishment enough.
@@MrLGrovesThat is exactly what I am saying, ref can, not players. Also ref will warn players he will restart frame after next round so players could choose to play different shot and continue the frame. P. S. : read comments carefully. Someone wrote player can rerack... Also these 2 examples have nothing to do with restarting the frame.
I really hate it when a player asks for the white to put back when the opponent has snookered himself accidentally. I think that's poor sportsmanship what Bingham did. I know that's in the rules but a player should be sporting.
Holt could try to catch black by swerving left to the side rail that would have left several pottable reds. Instead, he called green and swerved to the right, there seemed no route. I think the miss call is right in that aspect although the referee didn't mean that.
Marco was just way too kind to Jamie. It is pretty obvious to see that Jamie did not try his very best to hit any one of color balls. He was just simply trying to get the cueball safe after discussing with Marco. Ref should have called miss. Every credit to Marco, a true gentleman. Yet, there should be some protocol for referee to not apply any players suggestions before the shot.
It has to be clear that the player is making an attempt to hit the called colour, regardless of what's in the way. The shot Jamie played was perfectly fine, and let's be real, it's nigh impossible to get the cue ball safe and judge x amount of cannons on other reds (and not leave anything on!) but that's more of a case by case argument. If the referee did call a miss in that scenario, I think Marco would've played on anyway. His word didn't really matter, he was just helping Jamie because the referee could've called it wrong.
Fu is a gentalmen BECAUSE he knows that it is impossible to hit a colour.don’t underestimated jones-he knows exactly the game and shurly doesn’t neglect it
That's more or less it. Basically if it's an impossible escape, you have to strike the cueball hard enough that it would reach your nominated colour were there no balls in the way. It's to stop the situation where a player just taps the white and leaves a stalemate.
Tough spot because the ref has to judge if it was a good enough attempt to hit a color or if it was just an attempt at leaving the opponent with no shot without really caring about hitting a red
The ref is correct, its still a miss if the other player ends at a disadvantage after the shot is played. You need to understand, players at that level can play a miss so well, it looks like an attempt on target but with more emphasis on playing it safe. You cant just call a foul because its an “impossible” snooker without calling a miss if the other player ends up at a disadvantage.
The rule is actually quite simple. If snookered on all balls on, then the striker must hit towards the ball on with the same force as if the snookering ball was not there.
@RedBeard81 I am happy to see there is at least one other person who watched these clips and understands the proper rule that applies to them. As you said, it really is quite simple. But you would never know that from these comments....there 100 different opinions, 99 of which are incorrect.
No, read it again. This is obviously false. To escape a regular snooker on all balls on, you must use the cushions if possible, not just hit directly towards a ball on as if it was not there.
I'm still a bit confused about the first shot. Michael Holt's two efforts were essentially very similar to each other - but produced two outcomes, the first being he didn't leave Stuart on an easy red, and the second being - he did leave Stuart on an easy red. Why did the referee call a miss the first time but not the second time? Surely, the matter of leaving your opponent on a red or not is completely irrelevant to the situation. What if the same situation occurred with only a few reds on the table, all of which were evidently safe (i.e. tied to each other on cushions)? I honestly feel the referee got it wrong here, along with Stuart's rather odd action of accepting the miss. Michael Holt played a perfectly good shot the first time, should never have been called a miss
He should have made an attempt on the black instead of the green. That would have been an easier shot, but would have left his opponent with a better setup on a red and would have been a foul of seven instead of four (if he had missed). Had he made that attempt it wouldn't have been a miss.
When the situations like that for michael holt... as long as hes deemed too have made a genuine effort, and hes hit it hard enough too hit the colour he nominated, he shud not be deemed a miss... and bingham deffo shud not av put the ball back either... ref clueless... bingham unsportsmanlike...
It's deemed a miss to be on the safe side when it doesn't leave the opponent with a shot, as it's hard to tell the difference between an intentional foul and snooker and an unintentional one. the reason why it wasn't deemed a miss after the second attempt is because it left Bingham with a shot. The ref is making the right decision.
@@jama211 he wasnt a miss in 1st play... genuine attempt made... and bingham had a shot on after 1st attempt... just not a easy shot... but he cud of still potted a ball... shudnt of been allowed be put back... and bingham shud of used the miss rule in 1st place... unsportsmanlike...
@Question Time the miss rule is for trying to gain an advantage from a foul shot, or for playing it in an advantageous manner. He did neither of those.
@Question Time okay but your question is irrelevant to my point. That isn't how the miss rule is supposed to be applied, and he had no way of determining that that shot would leave him in a better position, as exhibited by the fact that his next attempt didn't. Also people get in a better position from a foul shot regularly when they pot the white.
@Question Time For 99.9% of the time, it doesn’t matter and the current rules work fine. For the 0.01% of time, we have ref discretion which can sometimes cause a bit of "controversy" in the loosest use of the term. With your way for that 0.01% of the time we will be stuck watching some player give 10000 points away in fouls while the referee will endlessly have to reset the table and the entire audience will want to shoot themselves because of the sheet stupidity they are forced to watch, or alternatively the player stuck in the impossible snooker will have to concede, either way it’s worse than what we currently have, even if what we currently have is not perfect.
Jones took advantage and made no attempt to even try hitting a colour. should have been called a miss. or should be free ball. Marco was too nice hope he won that match.
The official rules state that if the snooker is impossible the player must nominate a color and hit at it with enough force that the white would reach the object ball if the reds weren't there.
they generally call a miss to easily, its supposed to stop people deliberately not putting full effort into trying to escape and preferring to give up 4 points but leave the cue ball safe. so the second snooker was fair. However for the first one there was an easier shot going for the black but the result would likely leave an easy shot
The second situation seemed to be handled much better. In the first, no way should that have been called foul & miss, and pretty poor from Bingham too (in my opinion) to put Holt back in the same spot.
Wasn't there a rule somewhere if the cueball is trapped you nominate the color and hit as if there was no ball interfering and that counts as a fair attempt? Can't quite remember...
The miss-rule is good; its only possible in a Gentleman's game like snooker, though. In many instances, I have seen players who just didnt take the miss even if the ref called it because they knew it was either almost unhittable or a good enough attempt, even if it was a foul. I'm surprised Bingham didnt just continue playing after the first shot.
I think that in the case of having Holt try it once and if there was no way to hit a color, then the next attempt wouldn't be a 'miss'. Personally, I'm not a big fan of the miss rule, but I'll be buggered to within an inch of someone else's life if I can figure out a better way.
If I understand this correctly, in a situation where it is impossible to escape without commiting a snooker, the player has to hit the balls, in such a manner, as to leave an easy shot on for his/her opponent. Is that correct?
I think in the Holt / Bingham incident, the ref was correct to call a miss. The only direction out of the pack was the one Holt took but he could have chosen the black and put some LH side on it. But if he missed black, he would have been penalized 7 points. He chose green (4 points if a miss) and ref was right. Jones did not nominate a colour - if he did we did not hear it - and should have been penalized 7 points.
So if the opponent calls a miss then the shot is reset? When does it end if you can't play a shot without fouling? In theory you could make opponent play the same shot till they concede the frame?
In this situation or in general? In the first clip, the ref did not call a miss when he left Bingham on a ball. Also if you are in snookers required stage, a miss cannot be called. The first clip situation should not even have been called a miss, the rules say if you are in this situation all you have to do is hit the cue ball towards a colour with sufficient power. In general, the ref should only call a miss if he believes your skill is enough that you should be able to make the shot without fouling. If you have taken 10 serious shots and missed them all, they might reconsider and let you off only missing by 1mm.
What is the rule on it not being a foul? He has to touch a colored ball or net the black one, right? It looks tough but not impossible to try for the black in that first shot.
As a Referee I cannot say what I think about that call, all I can say is that you all should read Section 3 Rule 14 (a) (iii) The rules do cover this situation. (iii) says - a situation exists where it is impossible to hit the ball on, in the latter case it must be assumed the striker is attempting to hit the ball on provided that he plays, directly or indirectly, at the ball on with sufficient strength, in the referees opinion, to have reached the ball on but for the obstructing balls. N
Well, these are very interesting situations. I like what Marco Fu did, that is nice! The first one is more special, from a referee's perspective. Had it been one of mine leagu-games, I would have done the same as he did. I understand the question from Holt, but I would also call miss the first time. The reason is; The miss-rule is there to ensure that a player does his best to not disrupt the play. So if a referee thinks that the player COULD do it better, we call miss, and gives the discision to the opponent player. If the referee belives that the player has done the best possible try to hit the ball, we don't call miss. So to explain why I think that a "miss" is correct in the first one?; Holt gives it a try, that is fine. But, in order for the referee to let Holt try and find a better shot, he calls a "miss" and tests Holt. When it, after the second attempt, becomes apparent that this shot WAS the best possibility, and that Holt gave his best, the referee only calls foul. To me, that is very OK done by the referee, and I would have done the same :-)
The rules actually say if you are in this situation 'an impossible shot' then all you have to do is hit the cue ball towards a colour with sufficient power and it is not called a miss, so you do not have to reattempt.
What happens when your opponent gets you in an impossible to get out of snooker? Is it still retake until they say other wise or is it just a foul? Also, by the rules could the players make these retake again? First match seemed impossible yet it was foul and miss?
If Holt knew the exact rule he could have made the outcome a little better for himself. On an impossible snooker, all you need to do is nominate any colour ball and play in a directly straight line to that ball, and hit it hard enough that it would make the distance to the ball. It doesn't matter if there are reds between the white and colour ball and you hit them, as long as you hit it in a straight line at the nominated colour it cannot be called a miss. So he should have nominated the green, played directly at it with a lot of topspin, and tried to break through the reds and roll the white up to baulk. It would have spread the reds, hopefully left a few in safe positions on the cushions, and potentially put the white fairly safe as well. And he only would be fouled the 4 points with no risk of being called a miss.
The worst part is that he has to nominate a color. Also the not calling a miss on holts second is the right (judgment) call. The ref believes on the first shot that the ball can be struck, missing the same shot twice indicates that it cant be hit.
They aren't following the rule properly. You are supposed to aim 'directly' at a colour in a straight line even though you are aiming at the reds. It's a weird rule anyway. I think you have to nominate the colour you are going for.
I cant help but feel there should be a snooker player not taking part in the tournament on standby that the referee can phone to get their input on whether a situation is impossible to escape or not
No matter what the sport, no matter what the laws/rules are ,there comes a time when they go out of the window and simple straightforward commonsense must prevail.....
I am not a snooker player (I do watch it a lot), but it seems to me that it is possible for Holt to hit the black with a masse shot. Is that what Bingham is telling him too? Also, what I don't understand is that the ref calls a miss with the first attempt, but not with the second attempt. What is the difference? He attempts the same shot.
Bingham was not happy with the first shot since he had nothing on. Although he agrees the snooker is impossible to hit, he should at least benefit from it a little. I mean if the snooker wasn't impossible he would gain 16 / 20 points from foul and a miss having the ball replaced, but here a meager 4 points? So as a counterpart he expects to have a potable red. the ref also agrees after their discussion. I have to say I prefer this way of doing than the case with Marco Fu. Marco was way too nice and said as it was impossible he could play basically any shot as long as it was hard, allowing to look for a safe ball at the end of the table leaving no easy red for Marco. Unfair considering Marco hardly gains any points from a mistake his opponent put himself into.
@@5minutesaway124 I don't know man.. I don't think the rules state that you have to leave something on for your opponent with an attempt. It seems a little bit egocentric from Bingham to expect something like that. Of course Bingham doesn't have to help Holt in any way.
@@TSgitaar The problem is the rule could be considered "unfair". It states that if a player has an impossible snooker, he has to play towards a color at the pace needed to reach this color if no reds were in between. Therefore, if someone makes a perfect shot but snookers the opponent too badly, the opponent gets away scot-free. It is fairly illogical. I understand rules are rules, but a more talented snooker player could have hit the black (take a look at some of Jimmy White or Trump's escapes). So what makes an "impossible shot? Is it relevant to the ability of the snooker player? How do we judge it? I also think that in both these cases the players should pay a high price, since they snookered themselves due to their poor positional play. Should they just lose 4 points and not even leave a shot on? But I completely understand I express my personal opinion, and this is not the rule.
@@5minutesaway124 Fair points all around. Especially about whether the ability of a player plays a role.... I am not sure about that tbh, very good question. I think that the ref could possibly make a decision based on player ability. Maybe it is best to leave out entirely the role of the opponent or what is fair to both players out of the discussion, because it is very much subjective. I feel that it is up to the ref to decide what is a good attempt, but he should be consistent in his decision. In the case of Holt-Bingham, I just feel that Holt could have hit the black (or at least attempted that shot). Instead he attempted a more difficult escape that was not on. So I understand why the ref called a miss the first time, but I don't understand why it isn't a foul and a miss the second time.
The player has to play towards the object ball with a speed that would have brought the cue ball to the object ball if there were no other balls covering the object ball. Then a miss would not be called. If, however, in such situation you play the cue ball not towards the object ball, then it would be likely to get a miss ;) he plainly never played the ball towards the object ball so it should have been a miss .
Really interesting thanks! No way Holt's first effort should've been called a foul. Also, as Jones didn't nominate which colour he was going for I wonder if the foul should've been 7?
@@Mackem-bl3ix He played the shot which the rules require in an impossible situation - push cue ball directly at the object ball with appropriate speed to reach, regardless of obstructing balls. Obviously it's still a foul, but that's what the rules require.
@@Annifloyd ya he was one of them players that could play really well under pressure but only really in the big ones is where he shone most and could have easily won the worlds in 2016
In the first case I think the referee is wrong. You can only call out a "Miss" if there is an easier possibility available which was not taken by the player. I would be interested to hear from the referee what this easier solution would have been. At least I don't see any, and I played snooker for decades.
Look, I love watching snooker but I have an (idiot) question, and I dont know the rules as well as others. "Is there a limit on how many times an opponent can ask the other to try again? I know it's not the most interesting question, sorry
There is no limit, except one situation. If player can see object ball directly, he only have 3 attempts. Then, if he make "foul and the miss" three times, he lost the frame. :-)
If an escape is absolutely impossible then I really do not know any solution. Perhaps just let the player do what he wants and the ref calls a foul + enough points to the opposing player to mean the player in the predicament would need to pot every ball.
@@obs4281 yeah, I might have took the rest off the table then tipped it. Its a well known fact that most competition standard tables are made of cardboard anyway.
ReverendJackson Hope you're joking. Most table are made from Ebony and Black butt wood, rubber from England, leather from England, baize from Australia and West England and slate from the Liguarian region, in the north of Italy 😜
@@obs4281 no they're not. I have a friend who assembles the tables at the UK championship and the legs are hollow, and tend these days to be made of painted balsa wood. The green cloth isn't heavy and the cushions tend to be rubber anyway, which can't be that heavy as it floats in water
Pretty sure the red below the cue ball is covering a shot off the bottom cushion, although I could be wrong. The only option I see for Holt is to either try a swerve/masse for the black or off the right hand cushion with quite a bit of left hand side.
@@harrybroughton4999 Sorry ? player pots red, and snookers himself on a colour , nestled (against) in the reds is this a foul if player hits nestled reds?
Tricky. Bingham is gaming the situation. But Jones might be too - it looked like he was trying to get the white as safe as possible, through as many non-nominated balls as needed. Maybe a new rule is needed?
They've both potted a red. Now they need to hit a colour (i.e. non-red). However, it's physically impossible for them to hit a colour. So they are destined to play a foul shot. There is a miss rule in snooker. When you miss the ball you are supposed to be aiming for (red or colour), your opponent can make you play the shot again. This is to stop players gaining an advantage from fouling, for example by missing deliberately but leaving their opponent in a difficult situation. However in these cases, the players are completely unable not to play a foul. Hence the controversy.
I hate when ref's call "Foul & a miss" automatically like a robot without taking the situation into account, they need to use a bit of common sense & not let the miss rule spoil the frame. (Its not as bad as it used to be but some ref's still speak the phrase on every foul like a robot. 😣😡😧
In that situation where there is absolutely no way to hit a ball on, they should at least give away the maximum foul which is 7 points, seems a vague rule, Marco saying just wack it, makes it a mockery of the rules, he's just wacking to the balk in the hope he leaves distance between a white and a red
The ref decided he would only not call a miss if Holt left Bingham on a ball. That isn't the actual rule, but that's what he told him and what he ruled.
It wasn't a miss. The rule says if the ref deems the snooker 'impossible' then the striker only has to hit the cue ball towards the on ball with enough power to reach as if the snookering balls were not there.
@@TheRip72 I don't understand your comment, could you elaborate? If the ref did call a miss it would mean he thought a different shot was possible as you say, but a miss wasn't called.
@@enumeration I was referring to the first one, where the referee did call a miss. The referee will have a good look at all snookers to see what is possible & will therefore have a better view than the camera's single angle.
The players can agree to a re rack at any point of the game, and it probably would have been the best option in both situations as the players with any points were the ones in the bad position. But Bingham is a dick and wanted to take full advantage, Maybe a possible masse shot on the black was on but Bingham suggested an impossible side spin cushion shot, cause he wasnt happy he didnt have an amateur level red to start a break.
The players can always choose a rerack, but they must agree. If player A accidentally leaves himself in an impossible snooker, why on earth would player B agree to a rerack? Make player A play some honest attempt at hitting a color and then player B will probably be in a decent position to start a good break. If player A doesn’t make a fair attempt at hitting a color and just plays safe, then call a miss and make him play it again. It’s an unusual position, but you only end up there from a positional play debacle or really bad luck - gotta pay the price.
Miss rule is a joke. Its saying you either hit it or miss and leave your opponent an easy pot. You could one red left on top cushion with white in the D, you miss it by fraction ends up on bottom cushion or back in same place in the D and it would still be called miss. Snooker players are the only sports people who are honest and will call fouls on themselves even whilst effectively giving a frame to an opponent. So 99.99% they are trying to hit the ball. Even when they are snookered and the vastly underhit the ball they are still trying to hit it, they are trying to hit it and stay safe. Understand a miss being called then but not when its so close to the object ball
Couldn't both cases have been possible with some side and a cushion? The first situation it looks like he could have gone off the black cushion with some left spin and hit the black. The second situation it looks like he could have gone off the right cushion with some right spin and hit the black, although he might have to go off the black cushion also to get around the red.
When you're in a literally impossible snooker (i.e. can't directly hit any cushion), like Jones was in, you're required to shoot directly at an object ball, regardless of what other balls are in the way. The ref does not then call a miss, and play continues with a foul. It's in the rules, there's no ambiguity about.
The ref handled that Holt situation terribly, Jones played it exactly the way it's supposed to be played.
Holt situation was different because he could hit a cushion, which he proved by hitting the cushion.
@@itsmegeorgeous But he had to swerve it to hit the cushion, which means he couldn't hit it directly, couldn't hit it with any variation in pace and couldn't hit it with a controlled amount of side off the cushion. What he did (twice) is the only thing it was possible to do, except play direct at a ball in the way Jones did. It should never have been called a miss first time.
@@dislecsyk991 he has to jack the cue up to apply the side that is necessary to hit the bottom cushion. That doesn't mean he couldn't hit the side cushion directly without doing so.
@@itsmegeorgeous Yeah, to be fair, it's impossible to tell if he could have got to the cushion without the swerve, so I'll concede on that. Still think the ref got it wrong in calling a miss on the first attempt, though.
@@dislecsyk991 this actually isn't the rule. I just went online to check:
"a situation exists where it is impossible to hit the ball on.
In the latter case it must be assumed the striker is attempting to hit the
ball on provided that he plays, directly or indirectly, at the ball on with
sufficient strength, in the referee‟s opinion, to have reached the ball on
but for the obstructing ball or balls."
I think you missed the 'directly or indirectly' bit, as you've described only the 'directly' case.
Marco Fu, a total gentleman and a credit to snooker, wish there was more like him in the game
He's a class act that's for sure.
I think in general snooker is a very gentlemanly sport compared to others. Players frequently call out their own fouls, rarely argue with the ref (and if so, they're polite about it), etc.
@@MijinLaw Except Ronnie? (The referee part)
@@yuanheli307 Sure. Like I say, _in general_ , not always. It's still a far cry from sports like football, featuring diving and players aggressively getting in the referee's face.
@@MijinLaw there have been some of acts of bad sportsmanship over recent years - selby is the main culprit but you have allen not calling a foul on himself - mcgills performance against clarke -ebdon screaming and shouting etc carter barging into ronnie etc, the quinten hann saga
Marco being a gent saying it's not a miss.
If only Bingham had the respect he should have. The miss rule was put in place for people taking advantage missing balls deliberately. Please use that as a guideline refs...
Simon the way holt played the shot it was a miss every time, holt has to nominate the green and push through the reds with sufficient pace to reach the green for it to not be called a miss. Thats the difference between the clips
He was stuck between the reds. The shot he played was a push shot, so a foul if he did or didn't hit the green.
A miss shouldn't be called on the first shot because it is a very delicate situation, Bingham should step in and try to convince the referee that it is almost impossible to escape from there.
GTKomissaR Because it's amazing how he even called the first miss. Then Stuart stepping in saying he should leave something on just boggles my mind. I'm startled by the whole situation and the lack of respect from Bingham.
It wasn't even him who played the snooker.. Goes to show the great sportmanship of some players.
In my opinion the ref should always call a miss. If you seriously cannot hit an object ball then you're stuck having to leave your opponent a shot he will take or concede the frame. I can't see why that's so terrible, and it's certainly less divisive than allowing the ref to subjectively decide whether he should call the miss or not. If you pot the white the ref doesn't get to decide that it's not a foul just because you made a valiant attempt or were stuck with a bad shot, he shouldn't have that option with a miss either.
Jones' shot was an outstanding shot. As I understand the rules, if it is impossible to escape a snooker, you have to aim directly at a legal ball with enough pace that you would hit it if there was nothing in the way, and in doing so you avoid the "miss" being called. Fair play to Fu for agreeing it was indeed an impossible escape, although it clearly was, and any ref would see that.
For Jones to not leave an easy red, and get the cue ball to baulk, that was outrageous.
You are correct, but what you describe only apply, when you have to hit a colour. Jones puts a red and then has to put a colour, and then the rule you describe apply :-)
I think jones gained an advantage there. By blatantly hitting the red and aiming the white to the bulk area.
@@enkaan1676 Still Marco can put him back in again as you can do after every foul. Advantage gone.
I know what you mean though. He can chose the lesser evil so to speak if he has the choice between definitely leaving something or having to play a possibly difficult safety next.
@@enkaan1676 every time a player hits a shot in snooker he's trying to 'gain an advantage' while abiding to the rules of the game. Jones did this. What you blathering on about?
First case:bingham is saying to holt “try once maybee its possible”. Second case:fu is accepting that its impossible to hit a colour.
In both case there’s finally (thow different cases)a gentleman’s agreement,ONLY in snooker!!!
But i love among all the procedure:first the player look at is opponent by saying “i can not escape”, then his opponent has to agree with him.but its not enough:he has to turn to the judge and receiving his agreement too. And then the judge goes and talk to the opponent by asking him what would be the shot he would be quite happy with without calling a “miss rule”.
That’s why
I LOVE SNOOKER so much,its a gentlemen’s(and ladies)game.
Bingham isn't a gentleman. Follow the conversation. He wanted him to leave something on, then he'd agree not to call it a miss. That's why you hear Holt complaining about the miss rule. He had a safety, but chose to get some free points.
bingham only took the shot because there was a red on, not that he's being a gentleman. He was one if he did what Marco did and say that there's no way to hit a color and that it should be a foul, not a miss, as long as Michael try to make a shot in his best effort.
Raymond Liu
Allrighr maybee you’r right,i didnt get what they were saying exactly.
Thx for the explanation
it's all about the miss rule and the discretion the referee can exercise when a player is in a extremely difficult snooker. In the first case the referee should have exercised it but didnt not.
You can know more by reading others' comments.
Raymond Liu
THX
It's funny the ref doesn't explain the rule to Jones in English.
Instead, he explains it to Marco in Cantonese, and then Marco does the translation.
What surprise me is that the ref can speak Cantonese instead of mandarin
I speak fluent Mandarin and what the ref actually said was “yo momma SOOOO fat”!
Theodore Yuen What surprises me is your reckless disregard for grammar when pointing out other people’s mistakes.
Theodore Yuen really?... he prob born and from Hong Kong.
@@farikomike524 Fuk yu
I like Holt, he's got a sense of humour.
Great character is Michael.
SavageArfad you mean craic right?
Look like 45 years old crackhead
Very mercurial talent, on his day he can wipe the floor with anyone
Hes a miserable git and never stops moaning
2:15 when you are deciding what you want from the chippy
An Barr Buadh
😂
Is that a vending machine?
@@CPR306
The Chippy = A fish and chips shop.
Gauntlet Ah I see :) From the U.S.
😂
Is the ref really saying to Holt in the first clip that a miss will be called until he leaves something on for Bingham? If so that shows a complete failure to understand the miss rule by a professional referee...
@richjhart;
Yeah, I believe you are correct- if Holt leaves Bingham with an easy starting red the ref won't call a miss as Holt obviously hasn't gained an advantage by missing.... it would actually be the opposite with Bingham gaining the advantage so to call a miss wouldn't be needed (it is obvious anyway that Holt is trying his hardest to escape, there should be no miss called wherever the white ends up, easy red or not)
The referee didn't say that; Holt did.
I disagree. Holt was the one who messed up in the first place to get himself in that situation, so under no circumstances should Holt be the one to prosper from his next shot, genuine attempt to escape or not. Only if the shot gives the advantage to his opponent (i.e. leaving a red on) should the shot not be called a miss. Otherwise, someone can mess up and still end up with the advantage, which wouldn't be fair.
@@fredjimbob2962 Fairness has nothing to do with the miss rule, and for good reason: There is no independent measure of what is fair or not fair; it is a highly emotive judgement which varies wildly from person to person. Run of the ball is a well understood component of snooker and every player goes into the game knowing it well -- there's no need to try to legislate against it in the rulebook.
@@jonobrow True but there's no independent measure of whether a shot is a genuine attempt, probably even more so. And I agree, a miss should not be called if this was an attempt to escape from a snooker, given the difficulty, but this was a position Holt got himself into which I think is a different situation. To say that your opponent should be put in a difficult situation because of your own mistake would be open to abuse, someone could just commit a foul and leave their opponent with no shot because no miss would be called.
"You're just gonna keep putting it back until I leave him on...that's what the miss rule is for, yeah?" 😂
It's a self inflicted snooker so fair enough.
No it isn't, that's not what the miss rule is. In the event you're in an impossible snooker, there is no miss. The ref and player got that call wrong
@@Buggaton what if the opposing player is then left with a very difficult shot to either pot a red or get the cue ball safe? Bit unfair to be put in that position from an opponent's foul.
PS I'm aware that it's a free ball if you're snookered from a foul.
@@XaviRonaldo0 Good question but I'd say; that player can opt to make his opponent play the next shot. As one can do after any foul. Just not replacing all the balls.
@@XaviRonaldo0 you're supposed to try and leave your opponent in a difficult position 🤦🏻♂️ 😂 as you say you can't snooker someone from a foul but you don't need to make it easy for them.
Bad refereeing in the first case "Foul and a miss" being a default response.
Bengt Handlebars some referees are better than others...
I agree, the first referee should never have called a miss
I think it was fair. Bingham didn't have a good shot to play.
@Question Time what if there is no legal shot?
@Question Time just because a rule is the same for everyone doesn't mean the rule isnt bullshit
RESPECT Goes to....... MARCO FU!!!
In a situation like this the player should make an attempt to hit a colour, a good way to do it is to act as if there are no red balls blocking a colour and there is a line to hit a ball. Then they play the shot with enough power to hit the colour otherwise a miss is called. This prevents tapping a red gently.
EDIT: a miss shouldn't have been called in my opinion since holt made a clear attempt to hit a colour with no tactical advantages
Exactly. In this situation the only thing to be judged is if the player made something to gain a tactical advantage. And clearly he did not.
I don't think you can compare both situations identically. Holt was able to hit a cushion without hitting a red as seen in the video while it was impossible for Jones to miss a red from that position. However, both were unable to hit a color either way. I agree with how the situation was addressed by Fu with the referee. It's going to be a foul, inevitably, but a miss should not be given on any sort of attempt to get out of the situation.
That first ref doesn't even know the rules! At least the second one got it right, the player should know the rules though he's supposed to be a professional
It is also a 7 point penalty as he didn't nominate any ball.
@@nightattheoscars No, the ball on is the green they said that at 6:07
@@enumeration Marco Fu suggested the green, Jones didn't say anything thus constituting a foul which incurs a penalty of 7 points as soon as he played the white ball.
@@nightattheoscars You don't actually have to nominate the ball out loud, so long as it is obvious which ball you are going for (imagine there only being the black on the table and you line up a straight shot and the ref says foul because you didn't *say* black). Since they had a discussion with the ref where they decided he would hit it towards the green, the ref knows which ball he is going for.
@@enumeration It was not up to Marco to decide what shot to play for Jones. Jones should have definitely declared to the referee verbally his intended colour. Foul 7 away.
How interesting. First time I've seen this occur.
How could he call miss for the first shot and then not call it for a similar 2nd shot ?
On the first shot, all the reds were left safe, so the player had effectively gained an advantage. On the second shot they weren't.
I wish there was commentary. I do not know the rules but I am fascinated by this game.
It is my understanding that "foul and a miss" is declared by the referee when there's a realistic possibility of hitting the "on" ball, but in the referee's view the player did not do enough effort to do so. However, I have seen dozens and dozens of times almost impossible snooker situations where it would take almost literally a superhuman feat to get out of it without a foul... yet the referee keeps calling "foul and a miss" again and again, even though the player _very clearly_ is trying his best to not to foul. I never understood that.
What you're missing, is one of two possibilities. Sometimes, it's that it's not about whether there's a realistic possibility of hitting the ball they're going for, but when there's a realistic possibility of hitting any ball on. Sometimes what you're not seeing is there's a slightly easier ball or tactic in the ref's point of view the player could be going for, even off a cushion, but the player doesn't want to go for because it would put their opponent in a poor position, and it's worth the risk of giving your opponent some foul points to attempt to avoid. If they went for the easiest ball on in the refs point of view, it likely wouldn't be a miss if they missed it.
The second possibility, which was why the first shot was called a miss with Bingham, is that It's usually deemed a miss to be on the safe side when it doesn't leave the opponent with a shot, as it's hard to tell the difference between an intentional foul and snooker and an unintentional one.
IIRC the other player is entitled to a foul and a miss if the person takes a shot and fouls. If the player is not snookered from an available ball, after 2 fouls and a miss, the referee will warn him that if he does it a third time, he’ll lose the frame. If he is snookered however, he will not get that warning.
Well, it's one thing if the fouls are a result of a very clever snooker - then I see it as well-earned points to have them repeat a couple of times. The game is, after all, called “Snooker”!
But if a player fluked themselves snookered, then the end-of-break and foul points really should be punishment enough.
This just happened with Anthony McGill and Mark Williams gave him a rerack. What a genuine guy.
That is against the rules. I want a link.
@@noegojimmy the ref can decide to rerack if the frame is going to a dead end
@@MrLGrovesThat is exactly what I am saying, ref can, not players. Also ref will warn players he will restart frame after next round so players could choose to play different shot and continue the frame.
P. S. : read comments carefully. Someone wrote player can rerack...
Also these 2 examples have nothing to do with restarting the frame.
@@noegojimmy but also Bingham is a piece of work. What a disgrace
@@MrLGroves I am totally disappointed in Bingham. Shame.
I really hate it when a player asks for the white to put back when the opponent has snookered himself accidentally. I think that's poor sportsmanship what Bingham did. I know that's in the rules but a player should be sporting.
Holt could try to catch black by swerving left to the side rail that would have left several pottable reds. Instead, he called green and swerved to the right, there seemed no route. I think the miss call is right in that aspect although the referee didn't mean that.
Marco was just way too kind to Jamie. It is pretty obvious to see that Jamie did not try his very best to hit any one of color balls. He was just simply trying to get the cueball safe after discussing with Marco. Ref should have called miss.
Every credit to Marco, a true gentleman. Yet, there should be some protocol for referee to not apply any players suggestions before the shot.
It has to be clear that the player is making an attempt to hit the called colour, regardless of what's in the way. The shot Jamie played was perfectly fine, and let's be real, it's nigh impossible to get the cue ball safe and judge x amount of cannons on other reds (and not leave anything on!) but that's more of a case by case argument.
If the referee did call a miss in that scenario, I think Marco would've played on anyway. His word didn't really matter, he was just helping Jamie because the referee could've called it wrong.
Fu is a gentalmen BECAUSE he knows that it is impossible to hit a colour.don’t underestimated jones-he knows exactly the game and shurly doesn’t neglect it
That's more or less it. Basically if it's an impossible escape, you have to strike the cueball hard enough that it would reach your nominated colour were there no balls in the way. It's to stop the situation where a player just taps the white and leaves a stalemate.
Have another watch... literally impossible to hit any colour other than red unless your David Blaine of course
Tough spot because the ref has to judge if it was a good enough attempt to hit a color or if it was just an attempt at leaving the opponent with no shot without really caring about hitting a red
The ref is correct, its still a miss if the other player ends at a disadvantage after the shot is played. You need to understand, players at that level can play a miss so well, it looks like an attempt on target but with more emphasis on playing it safe. You cant just call a foul because its an “impossible” snooker without calling a miss if the other player ends up at a disadvantage.
This guy here knows whats it is about.
The rule is actually quite simple. If snookered on all balls on, then the striker must hit towards the ball on with the same force as if the snookering ball was not there.
@René Artois yes but that is for the referee to decide if the cue ball was struck with adequate force to reach the ball on!
@RedBeard81 I am happy to see there is at least one other person who watched these clips and understands the proper rule that applies to them. As you said, it really is quite simple. But you would never know that from these comments....there 100 different opinions, 99 of which are incorrect.
richjhart that’s the reason Bingham was right in saying you could have gone for the black = miss
No, read it again. This is obviously false. To escape a regular snooker on all balls on, you must use the cushions if possible, not just hit directly towards a ball on as if it was not there.
I'm still a bit confused about the first shot.
Michael Holt's two efforts were essentially very similar to each other - but produced two outcomes, the first being he didn't leave Stuart on an easy red, and the second being - he did leave Stuart on an easy red. Why did the referee call a miss the first time but not the second time? Surely, the matter of leaving your opponent on a red or not is completely irrelevant to the situation.
What if the same situation occurred with only a few reds on the table, all of which were evidently safe (i.e. tied to each other on cushions)? I honestly feel the referee got it wrong here, along with Stuart's rather odd action of accepting the miss.
Michael Holt played a perfectly good shot the first time, should never have been called a miss
You can't call a miss on a shot like that, it's just a foul. I've seen Bingham in situations like this before - he;'s not a good sport.,
He should have made an attempt on the black instead of the green. That would have been an easier shot, but would have left his opponent with a better setup on a red and would have been a foul of seven instead of four (if he had missed). Had he made that attempt it wouldn't have been a miss.
Bad sports rarely win anything of substance hence Bingham's lack of victories
When the situations like that for michael holt... as long as hes deemed too have made a genuine effort, and hes hit it hard enough too hit the colour he nominated, he shud not be deemed a miss... and bingham deffo shud not av put the ball back either... ref clueless... bingham unsportsmanlike...
It's deemed a miss to be on the safe side when it doesn't leave the opponent with a shot, as it's hard to tell the difference between an intentional foul and snooker and an unintentional one. the reason why it wasn't deemed a miss after the second attempt is because it left Bingham with a shot. The ref is making the right decision.
@@jama211 he wasnt a miss in 1st play... genuine attempt made... and bingham had a shot on after 1st attempt... just not a easy shot... but he cud of still potted a ball... shudnt of been allowed be put back... and bingham shud of used the miss rule in 1st place... unsportsmanlike...
He should never have called a miss on Holt, what a joke.
@Question Time the miss rule is for trying to gain an advantage from a foul shot, or for playing it in an advantageous manner. He did neither of those.
@Question Time okay but your question is irrelevant to my point. That isn't how the miss rule is supposed to be applied, and he had no way of determining that that shot would leave him in a better position, as exhibited by the fact that his next attempt didn't.
Also people get in a better position from a foul shot regularly when they pot the white.
@Question Time That is a terrible idea, in impossible situations like this you would have endless resets and the entire frame won with fouls.
@Question Time Not many but thats kind of irrelevant.
@Question Time For 99.9% of the time, it doesn’t matter and the current rules work fine. For the 0.01% of time, we have ref discretion which can sometimes cause a bit of "controversy" in the loosest use of the term. With your way for that 0.01% of the time we will be stuck watching some player give 10000 points away in fouls while the referee will endlessly have to reset the table and the entire audience will want to shoot themselves because of the sheet stupidity they are forced to watch, or alternatively the player stuck in the impossible snooker will have to concede, either way it’s worse than what we currently have, even if what we currently have is not perfect.
Can someone explain this game to me? I’m only familiar with 8 & 9 ball.
As the 1st player showed I'd pass the cue to the ref aswel and love to see them attempt them shots as nothing on at all
I think they should just crack open a nice packet of Hob-Nobs and have a good game of soggy biscuit to decide the outcome.
It's the only way...
You’re fucking gross.
You only play soggy biscuit on digestives.
Jones took advantage and made no attempt to even try hitting a colour. should have been called a miss. or should be free ball. Marco was too nice hope he won that match.
The official rules state that if the snooker is impossible the player must nominate a color and hit at it with enough force that the white would reach the object ball if the reds weren't there.
they generally call a miss to easily, its supposed to stop people deliberately not putting full effort into trying to escape and preferring to give up 4 points but leave the cue ball safe.
so the second snooker was fair. However for the first one there was an easier shot going for the black but the result would likely leave an easy shot
Both snookered guys should have asked the ref to clean the white ball.
The second situation seemed to be handled much better.
In the first, no way should that have been called foul & miss, and pretty poor from Bingham too (in my opinion) to put Holt back in the same spot.
It was a miss because the black was fairly straightforward to hit and he went for the brown instead
Wasn't there a rule somewhere if the cueball is trapped you nominate the color and hit as if there was no ball interfering and that counts as a fair attempt? Can't quite remember...
Yes. Part of 3.14 Foul and a Miss.
What is Billy from EastEnders doing playing snooker?
Are jump shots not allowed in snooker?
Nope
Respect ... Marco
The miss-rule is good; its only possible in a Gentleman's game like snooker, though. In many instances, I have seen players who just didnt take the miss even if the ref called it because they knew it was either almost unhittable or a good enough attempt, even if it was a foul. I'm surprised Bingham didnt just continue playing after the first shot.
I'll check the exact wording of the rule later, but I don't see how you can call a miss on the first attempt there.
Having checked the rule, definitely. How in the world is the referee not satisfied he's made a good enough effort.
I think that in the case of having Holt try it once and if there was no way to hit a color, then the next attempt wouldn't be a 'miss'.
Personally, I'm not a big fan of the miss rule, but I'll be buggered to within an inch of someone else's life if I can figure out a better way.
If I understand this correctly, in a situation where it is impossible to escape without commiting a snooker, the player has to hit the balls, in such a manner, as to leave an easy shot on for his/her opponent.
Is that correct?
Why was there an issue with the non shooter when the shooter played a bad shot?
I think in the Holt / Bingham incident, the ref was correct to call a miss. The only direction out of the pack was the one Holt took but he could have chosen the black and put some LH side on it. But if he missed black, he would have been penalized 7 points. He chose green (4 points if a miss) and ref was right.
Jones did not nominate a colour - if he did we did not hear it - and should have been penalized 7 points.
first clip = why was the first one foul and a miss and the second "take" just a foul?
I love you Marco.
I give him credit...of all the players in this video, Marco is the ONLY one who knows the Rules of Snooker.
So if the opponent calls a miss then the shot is reset? When does it end if you can't play a shot without fouling? In theory you could make opponent play the same shot till they concede the frame?
In this situation or in general? In the first clip, the ref did not call a miss when he left Bingham on a ball. Also if you are in snookers required stage, a miss cannot be called. The first clip situation should not even have been called a miss, the rules say if you are in this situation all you have to do is hit the cue ball towards a colour with sufficient power.
In general, the ref should only call a miss if he believes your skill is enough that you should be able to make the shot without fouling. If you have taken 10 serious shots and missed them all, they might reconsider and let you off only missing by 1mm.
How do they not know what to do here? That situation must come up ALL THE TIME.
What is the rule on it not being a foul?
He has to touch a colored ball or net the black one, right? It looks tough but not impossible to try for the black in that first shot.
As a Referee I cannot say what I think about that call, all I can say is that you all should read Section 3 Rule 14 (a) (iii) The rules do cover this situation. (iii) says - a situation exists where it is impossible to hit the ball on, in the latter case it must be assumed the striker is attempting to hit the ball on provided that he plays, directly or indirectly, at the ball on with sufficient strength, in the referees opinion, to have reached the ball on but for the obstructing balls. N
The ref totally wrong if a snooker is impossible to escape from, the rules says to use enough speed in a direction of the colour you call .
Well, these are very interesting situations.
I like what Marco Fu did, that is nice!
The first one is more special, from a referee's perspective.
Had it been one of mine leagu-games, I would have done the same as he did. I understand the question from Holt, but I would also call miss the first time. The reason is; The miss-rule is there to ensure that a player does his best to not disrupt the play. So if a referee thinks that the player COULD do it better, we call miss, and gives the discision to the opponent player.
If the referee belives that the player has done the best possible try to hit the ball, we don't call miss.
So to explain why I think that a "miss" is correct in the first one?; Holt gives it a try, that is fine. But, in order for the referee to let Holt try and find a better shot, he calls a "miss" and tests Holt. When it, after the second attempt, becomes apparent that this shot WAS the best possibility, and that Holt gave his best, the referee only calls foul.
To me, that is very OK done by the referee, and I would have done the same :-)
How disruptive to the game is it....when the referee needs to put all the balls back in their respective spots?
hello how many times does a player have to attempt the impossible shot?
The rules actually say if you are in this situation 'an impossible shot' then all you have to do is hit the cue ball towards a colour with sufficient power and it is not called a miss, so you do not have to reattempt.
What was the point of ref calling holt's first attempt a miss when it was so obvious he couldn't get to it.
This would make more sense of I had the slightest clue what you're talking about.
What happens when your opponent gets you in an impossible to get out of snooker? Is it still retake until they say other wise or is it just a foul? Also, by the rules could the players make these retake again? First match seemed impossible yet it was foul and miss?
If Holt knew the exact rule he could have made the outcome a little better for himself. On an impossible snooker, all you need to do is nominate any colour ball and play in a directly straight line to that ball, and hit it hard enough that it would make the distance to the ball. It doesn't matter if there are reds between the white and colour ball and you hit them, as long as you hit it in a straight line at the nominated colour it cannot be called a miss. So he should have nominated the green, played directly at it with a lot of topspin, and tried to break through the reds and roll the white up to baulk. It would have spread the reds, hopefully left a few in safe positions on the cushions, and potentially put the white fairly safe as well. And he only would be fouled the 4 points with no risk of being called a miss.
When did Drake Bell start playing snooker?
Should ask the ref "If that is a miss then please tell me how to attempt the shot better so as no to have a miss call?"
What kind of shot was that Jones???
Push shot. I think it's somewhere in the rules. The object ball was impposible to hit. Completely impposible.
The worst part is that he has to nominate a color. Also the not calling a miss on holts second is the right (judgment) call. The ref believes on the first shot that the ball can be struck, missing the same shot twice indicates that it cant be hit.
They aren't following the rule properly. You are supposed to aim 'directly' at a colour in a straight line even though you are aiming at the reds. It's a weird rule anyway. I think you have to nominate the colour you are going for.
In that last case, was he trying a jump shot?
No, he's just trying to get the queue ball behind the baulk line..
I cant help but feel there should be a snooker player not taking part in the tournament on standby that the referee can phone to get their input on whether a situation is impossible to escape or not
No matter what the sport, no matter what the laws/rules are ,there comes a time when they go out of the window and simple straightforward commonsense must prevail.....
I am not a snooker player (I do watch it a lot), but it seems to me that it is possible for Holt to hit the black with a masse shot. Is that what Bingham is telling him too? Also, what I don't understand is that the ref calls a miss with the first attempt, but not with the second attempt. What is the difference? He attempts the same shot.
Bingham was not happy with the first shot since he had nothing on. Although he agrees the snooker is impossible to hit, he should at least benefit from it a little. I mean if the snooker wasn't impossible he would gain 16 / 20 points from foul and a miss having the ball replaced, but here a meager 4 points? So as a counterpart he expects to have a potable red. the ref also agrees after their discussion.
I have to say I prefer this way of doing than the case with Marco Fu. Marco was way too nice and said as it was impossible he could play basically any shot as long as it was hard, allowing to look for a safe ball at the end of the table leaving no easy red for Marco. Unfair considering Marco hardly gains any points from a mistake his opponent put himself into.
@@5minutesaway124 I don't know man.. I don't think the rules state that you have to leave something on for your opponent with an attempt. It seems a little bit egocentric from Bingham to expect something like that. Of course Bingham doesn't have to help Holt in any way.
@@TSgitaar The problem is the rule could be considered "unfair". It states that if a player has an impossible snooker, he has to play towards a color at the pace needed to reach this color if no reds were in between. Therefore, if someone makes a perfect shot but snookers the opponent too badly, the opponent gets away scot-free. It is fairly illogical.
I understand rules are rules, but a more talented snooker player could have hit the black (take a look at some of Jimmy White or Trump's escapes). So what makes an "impossible shot? Is it relevant to the ability of the snooker player? How do we judge it?
I also think that in both these cases the players should pay a high price, since they snookered themselves due to their poor positional play. Should they just lose 4 points and not even leave a shot on?
But I completely understand I express my personal opinion, and this is not the rule.
@@5minutesaway124 Fair points all around. Especially about whether the ability of a player plays a role.... I am not sure about that tbh, very good question. I think that the ref could possibly make a decision based on player ability. Maybe it is best to leave out entirely the role of the opponent or what is fair to both players out of the discussion, because it is very much subjective. I feel that it is up to the ref to decide what is a good attempt, but he should be consistent in his decision. In the case of Holt-Bingham, I just feel that Holt could have hit the black (or at least attempted that shot). Instead he attempted a more difficult escape that was not on. So I understand why the ref called a miss the first time, but I don't understand why it isn't a foul and a miss the second time.
Is there an official rule if the shot is impossible?
Yes... if the player has the intention to hit the ball. And plays the shot with enough pace. The referee will call a foul. But not a miss.
This is ridiculous, the correct snooker etiquette in this situation is for one of the players to pull their pants down and shit all over the table.
lol
Surely you just have to forfeit at that point. If all you can do is foul then it's never going to be in your opponent's interest to take the shot on.
The player has to play towards the object ball with a speed that would have brought the cue ball to the object ball if there were no other balls covering the object ball. Then a miss would not be called.
If, however, in such situation you play the cue ball not towards the object ball, then it would be likely to get a miss ;) he plainly never played the ball towards the object ball so it should have been a miss .
As you said "if there were no other balls covering the object ball". Well what do you call the 2 reds he's stuck between?
JAYZ3O3 you didnt quite understand what he is saying. Read it again, maybe you'll click 🤷🏻♂️
Really interesting thanks! No way Holt's first effort should've been called a foul. Also, as Jones didn't nominate which colour he was going for I wonder if the foul should've been 7?
Jones did however, play directly and intentionally at a red when it was not the ball "on", and so should have been a seven point foul
@@Mackem-bl3ix He played the shot which the rules require in an impossible situation - push cue ball directly at the object ball with appropriate speed to reach, regardless of obstructing balls. Obviously it's still a foul, but that's what the rules require.
I think it´s fair for the ref for wanting to see 2 attempts on this and then make the judgement.
Where is Mark Fu disappeared now a days, he is such a great player.
He had eye surgery about 2 years ago. Ever since then he hasn't been quite the same... Hope he can return to being the great player he can be.
Since his eye surgery he has beaten Ronnie O'Sullivan.
@@Annifloyd ya he was one of them players that could play really well under pressure but only really in the big ones is where he shone most and could have easily won the worlds in 2016
I think alex higgins would have taken the first shot.
I think he would have escaped from both scenarios, and got a snooker! LEGEND!
EDIT: BUT a bit of a dick personality wise!
jones played the shot right
In the first case I think the referee is wrong. You can only call out a "Miss" if there is an easier possibility available which was not taken by the player. I would be interested to hear from the referee what this easier solution would have been. At least I don't see any, and I played snooker for decades.
Look, I love watching snooker but I have an (idiot) question, and I dont know the rules as well as others.
"Is there a limit on how many times an opponent can ask the other to try again?
I know it's not the most interesting question, sorry
I liked your comment so if anyone replies I'll get a notification too 😛
Much appreciated Mukul, thank you👍
Good question jon. I don't know if there is a limit but I've seen miss called about 5 times in a row. The player then conceded so who knows....
@@screaminlordbyron7767 thanks,
There is no limit, except one situation. If player can see object ball directly, he only have 3 attempts. Then, if he make "foul and the miss" three times, he lost the frame. :-)
If an escape is absolutely impossible then I really do not know any solution. Perhaps just let the player do what he wants and the ref calls a foul + enough points to the opposing player to mean the player in the predicament would need to pot every ball.
Quite funny how everyone seems to know the rules here.. the referees know what they’re doing (most of time)
Bingham looks like Wilson Fisk from Daredevil
I would have just tipped the table onto its side, snapped my cue, swore a lot, then stomped out
Can you lift 1250kgs?
@@obs4281 yeah, I might have took the rest off the table then tipped it. Its a well known fact that most competition standard tables are made of cardboard anyway.
ReverendJackson Hope you're joking. Most table are made from Ebony and Black butt wood, rubber from England, leather from England, baize from Australia and West England and slate from the Liguarian region, in the north of Italy 😜
@@obs4281 no they're not. I have a friend who assembles the tables at the UK championship and the legs are hollow, and tend these days to be made of painted balsa wood. The green cloth isn't heavy and the cushions tend to be rubber anyway, which can't be that heavy as it floats in water
ReverendJackson I said 'most' not 'all'. I choose to be diplomatic with my words in case my research is wrong. Thanks for the insight 👍
The proper and correct shot to take was the black from the bottom cushion with a touch of left spin, obviously employing the rest.
Pretty sure the red below the cue ball is covering a shot off the bottom cushion, although I could be wrong.
The only option I see for Holt is to either try a swerve/masse for the black or off the right hand cushion with quite a bit of left hand side.
Is Holt suffering from the old Farmer's?
It's not a comment about the snooker, but every chinese tournament I've been watching the air con is ridiculously loud 😅
The rule is simple: An impossible shot leads to a foul, but it's not a miss!
So they can just play the shot in a way to put their opponent in trouble with no worry of a miss being called?
Anybody explain, if after potting a red, white ball nestled against a red, does that count as a foul as hit red first?
No, definitely not
@@harrybroughton4999 Sorry ? player pots red, and snookers himself on a colour , nestled (against) in the reds is this a foul if player hits nestled reds?
@@Mrfort no.
If you're on a colour and the cueball is touching a red, as long as you nominate a colour and hit it, it's not a foul.
Tricky. Bingham is gaming the situation. But Jones might be too - it looked like he was trying to get the white as safe as possible, through as many non-nominated balls as needed. Maybe a new rule is needed?
It did strike me as a touch ungracious.
would be helpful to have some knowledgable commentary to help us understand what is going on. what exactly is the controversy?
They've both potted a red. Now they need to hit a colour (i.e. non-red). However, it's physically impossible for them to hit a colour. So they are destined to play a foul shot. There is a miss rule in snooker. When you miss the ball you are supposed to be aiming for (red or colour), your opponent can make you play the shot again. This is to stop players gaining an advantage from fouling, for example by missing deliberately but leaving their opponent in a difficult situation. However in these cases, the players are completely unable not to play a foul. Hence the controversy.
There are times when I don't understand the 'miss' call!
Noise reduction might be good (Audacity)
I hate when ref's call "Foul & a miss" automatically like a robot without taking the situation into account, they need to use a bit of common sense & not let the miss rule spoil the frame. (Its not as bad as it used to be but some ref's still speak the phrase on every foul like a robot. 😣😡😧
In that situation where there is absolutely no way to hit a ball on, they should at least give away the maximum foul which is 7 points, seems a vague rule, Marco saying just wack it, makes it a mockery of the rules, he's just wacking to the balk in the hope he leaves distance between a white and a red
How is holts first attempt a miss and the 2nd attempt just a foul???
The ref decided he would only not call a miss if Holt left Bingham on a ball. That isn't the actual rule, but that's what he told him and what he ruled.
2:00 i heard "stop being harmful" omg
He's saying Stuart Bingham 4
Ref should know that you play towards a nominated ball at a pace that would reach said ball in an impossible to hit situation.
Can Fu not make him play again and again till he wins ?
Plz.need to know the rule.
Teacher Guide A miss can be called only untill they come to a situation where snookers are required. If such situation arrives, then its only a foul
It wasn't a miss. The rule says if the ref deems the snooker 'impossible' then the striker only has to hit the cue ball towards the on ball with enough power to reach as if the snookering balls were not there.
@@enumeration Which infers that the referee considered a different shot may have been possible.
@@TheRip72 I don't understand your comment, could you elaborate?
If the ref did call a miss it would mean he thought a different shot was possible as you say, but a miss wasn't called.
@@enumeration I was referring to the first one, where the referee did call a miss. The referee will have a good look at all snookers to see what is possible & will therefore have a better view than the camera's single angle.
In a situation like that, can the (gentlemen-)players agree to a re-rack?
The players can agree to a re rack at any point of the game, and it probably would have been the best option in both situations as the players with any points were the ones in the bad position. But Bingham is a dick and wanted to take full advantage, Maybe a possible masse shot on the black was on but Bingham suggested an impossible side spin cushion shot, cause he wasnt happy he didnt have an amateur level red to start a break.
The players can always choose a rerack, but they must agree. If player A accidentally leaves himself in an impossible snooker, why on earth would player B agree to a rerack? Make player A play some honest attempt at hitting a color and then player B will probably be in a decent position to start a good break. If player A doesn’t make a fair attempt at hitting a color and just plays safe, then call a miss and make him play it again. It’s an unusual position, but you only end up there from a positional play debacle or really bad luck - gotta pay the price.
xenoborg007 & baseballgenius3:
Thank you both for nice and good explaining answers! Happy to read them!
Miss rule is a joke. Its saying you either hit it or miss and leave your opponent an easy pot. You could one red left on top cushion with white in the D, you miss it by fraction ends up on bottom cushion or back in same place in the D and it would still be called miss. Snooker players are the only sports people who are honest and will call fouls on themselves even whilst effectively giving a frame to an opponent. So 99.99% they are trying to hit the ball. Even when they are snookered and the vastly underhit the ball they are still trying to hit it, they are trying to hit it and stay safe. Understand a miss being called then but not when its so close to the object ball
Couldn't both cases have been possible with some side and a cushion? The first situation it looks like he could have gone off the black cushion with some left spin and hit the black. The second situation it looks like he could have gone off the right cushion with some right spin and hit the black, although he might have to go off the black cushion also to get around the red.