Baseball pocket billiards

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Woodcut detail from A Little Pretty Pocket-Book (1744), providing the first known reference to baseball.
Woodcut detail from A Little Pretty Pocket-Book (1744), providing the first known reference to baseball.

Baseball pocket billiards, sometimes in context referred to simply as baseball, is a pocket billiards game suited for multiple players that borrows phraseology and even some aspects of form from the game of baseball. Played on a standard pool table, in the game the 9 ball is known as the pitcher , the table’s foot spot where balls are racked is known as home plate and each team or player is afforded nine innings to score as many runs as possible.[1][2][3]

Baseball pocket billiards has been in existence since at least 1912, when in a pamphlet detailing it by Brunswick, it was soberly described as "the most fascinating game of the twentieth century."[1] The game has relatively simple rules. Each players is allotted nine innings to score as many runs as possible. The winner is the player with the highest run tally after all players have taken their turn at bat.[1]

Although never one of the most popular billiards pursuits, and more well known in the early to mid 20th century, the game has been featured in well advertized public tournaments. For example, in 1922 the Pennsylvania Railroad System hosted a large scale “Indoor Championships” sports tourney in Columbus, Ohio with more than 1,500 contestants competing at 15 events including baseball pocket billiards, for an audience of approximately 20,000 spectators.[4]

Contents

1880s billiards poster.
1880s billiards poster.

Baseball pocket billiards is played with 21 numbered object balls. Since a standard set of pool balls is numbered 1 through 15, sets of balls numbered 16 through 21, known as "baseball sets," have been marketed specifically for the game. The balls are racked at the foot end of a pool table, with the apex ball of the rack centered over the foot spot know in the game as “home plate.”[2]

Viewed from the racker's vantage point, the 1-ball is placed at the rack's apex, the 2-ball at the rack's right corner, and the 3 ball at the rack's left corner. The 9 ball, called the "pitcher," is placed at what would be the center of the rack if the game was only played with 15 balls. All other balls are placed randomly. Because most physical racks only accommodate 15 balls, the last row of balls may be placed manually after racking with a standard triangle. The opening break and subsequent breaks, if any (see infra), are performed with the cue ball in hand from the kitchen (behind the table's head string).[2]

Baseball pocket billiards is a call-shot game, meaning a player must call the ball to be hit and the intended pocket on all shots but for the break. Any incidental balls pocketed on a successful called shot count in the player’s favor but must be spotted to home plate if unsuccessful. Each player is allowed nine innings at the table, played in succession, in which to score as many runs as possible. The game ends when all players have completed their rounds. The winner is the player with the most runs after all have finished their turn at bat.[2]

Each legally pocketed balls garners the shooter the numerical face value of the ball. For example, pocketing the 2- and 15-balls during an inning results in a score of 17 runs for that visit. Scores must be contemporaneously recorded on a score sheet with the total tally for each inning marked. If a player pockets all 21 balls before his inning allotment ends, the balls are re-racked and play continues, with a re-break from the kitchen. Each inning continues until a player misses a ball or commits a foul.

The penalty for a foul is a loss of turn, and no score for the ball or balls pocketed on the fouled stroke as well as for the immediately preceding pocketed ball during any inning. This means that if a player did not legally pocket a ball on the stroke preceding the foul, the last ball pocketed in the last scoring inning is spotted and subtracted from that prior inning's score. All balls pocketed on a fouled stroke are spotted to home plate. If the player has not yet made any balls at the time of the foul, the first subsequent ball potted is spotted at the inning's conclusion, and does not count toward the player's score.[2]

  1. ^ a b c Shamos, Michael Ian (1993). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Billiards. New York, NY: Lyons & Burford, Pages 22. ISBN 1-55821-219-1. 
  2. ^ a b c d e BCA Rules Committee (November, 1992). Billiards - the Official Rules and Record Book. Iowa City, Iowa: Billiard Congress of America, Pages 137-9. ISBN 1-87849-302-7. 
  3. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. (2007). Baseball. Retrieved on 2007-02-21.
  4. ^ New York Times Company (April 17, 1922). 1,500 in Sports Tourney. Retrieved February 24, 2007.


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