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Whats the difference between pool and snooker?

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Whats the difference between pool and snooker?

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  1. the common thing between snooker and pool is to put a ball in pcoket.

    but rules and size of table of snooker and pool are different.

    in snooker we have following balls

    red          15 balls        1 points

    blue         1               5 points

    pink         1               6 p

    blck         1               7 pionts

    brown        1               4 p

    green        1               3 p

    yellow       1               2 p

    the rule for playing snooker

    pot a red ball then a colour mention above and u will get numbers according to ball

    if dont touch the ball u aim at than it will be foul

    put the cue ball into packet is also file accouding to colour bass

    while in pool u have 17 balls

    one is call full ball and other is call half ball

    u should have to chose between those afer pottin one

    and in last u will pot the queen

    which player did it first will win


  2. They have their own sports. Even 9-ball pool is pretty small over there ... Because you can play snooker doesn't mean you can play 9 ball ...

    When they get to the other end, and climb out of the pool, the next racer jumps in, ... Pool and Snooker across · Pool Table Lights billiards

    snooker and pool is more subtle than. at first appears. Clearly you must give ... instant rolling is obtained by differ-. entiation of the speed equation

  3. Simon Buckingham has written a great article at SnooHoo, telling us the basic difference between pool and snooker. Such information is often assumed known, but many professionals will fail to accurately distinguish between the two. So, here are the major differences between these two amazing cuesports.

    Pool and snooker are two similar sports which both entail using sticks called cues to pocket balls of different colors into six holes on the sides and corners of a rectangular table. Yet these two sports go a long way to illustrate the difference between the old organized world and the new unorganized world.

    Snooker is a sport from the age old organized tradition. You are much more likely to get dressed up when playing snooker, often in a dinner suit and bow tie. You play snooker on a long table of well over two meters in length and a meter wide. You hit the balls gently, relying on their smooth passage across the slate-bedded table to reach their destination pocket.

    Because the table is so large, success (known as "break building": an unbroken series of pocketing the balls) depends upon using spin to position the white cue ball for potting the subsequent ball. There are set rules which are strictly adhered to, for example, if you accidentally tap a snooker ball with the end of your cue you "foul" and forfeit your shot.

    Snooker is played at a thoughtful, leisurely pace and some time can elapse between shots. One frame between average players can take up a good hour.

    The contrast between snooker and pool is clear. Pool represents the unorganized world. You can play in any clothes that you find comfortable. The pool table is much smaller, just over a meter in length and less than a meter wide. The pockets are larger relative to the size of the balls. Paradoxically, even though the pool table is smaller, you tend to hit the balls harder because the cloth on the table (which can be and often is blue or red as well as green) is more coarse. The rules are less strict, insofar as the acceptance of minor mistakes when setting up a shot tends to be greater. The pace of pool is quicker: you don't need complicated implements such as "spiders" which are supplementary cues that let you reach areas of the snooker table in order to play shots that human size would otherwise preclude.

    Games between good pool players can be over in 10 minutes. There is less break building because the table is small enough for the good players to pot a few balls and win.

    Pool is a sport which is much more attuned to today's quicker, faster unorganized world than the more organized world of snooker. Our goals remain the same: personal prosperity (potting the balls) and the infrastructure of the world (the table) is smaller and more accessible. As with the world, pool games are played at a faster speed, the rules are fewer, innovation rather than strategy much more important. The entry barriers are lower: people who have not played pool or snooker before can pick up a short pool cue and have a go and pot something.

    New beginners could be playing snooker a long time before they pocket a ball. The start up costs for the pool equipment are lower, and the ease of carrying around a pool cue greater.

    With its smaller table and wider pockets, pool is like technological capitalism, giving its players both the opportunity and the opportunity to pursue that opportunity.

    The image of the pool player in the movie "The Hustler" contrasts with that of the gentleman in his country mansion playing snooker. As someone once said, "The best things come to those who wait, but only the things left by those who hustle". Rack up those pool balls, and play on, play on.

    this answer provided by: Internet_Professor

    http://answers.yahoo.com/my/profile;_ylt...

  4. Snooker = delayed gratification

    Pool is faster, requires less skill...and alot more fun!!

  5. the difference is like between a mouse and an elephant

    Go Ronnie!

  6. mainly... there are different rules and different balls.

    please look over the links below

  7. isn't pool and snooker the same thing? lol

    Susie

  8. i think there is no difference between pool and snooker

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