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  2. Nine-ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine-ball

    Using a cue stick, players must strike the white cue ball to pocket nine colored billiard balls, hitting them in ascending numerical order. An individual game (or rack) is won by the player pocketing the 9 ball. Matches are usually played as a race to a set number of racks, with the player who reaches the set number winning the match.

  3. Rotation (pool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotation_(pool)

    Rotation, sometimes called rotation pool, 15-ball rotation, or 61, is a pool game, played with a pocketed billiards table, cue ball, and triangular rack of fifteen billiard balls, in which the lowest-numbered object ball on the table must be always struck by the cue ball first, to attempt to pocket numbered balls for points. [1]

  4. Kelly pool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly_pool

    Many billiard-specific and etymological sources point to kelly pool, or an early version of the game called kelly rotation, as the origin of the common idiom, "behind the eight-ball". Some publications assume the expression to be eponymously derived from the game of eight-ball, but the expression came into use before eight-ball was popularized ...

  5. Pool (cue sports) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pool_(cue_sports)

    Although skittle pool is played on a pocketless carom billiards table, the term pool later stuck to all new games of pocket billiards as the sport gained in popularity in the United States, [8]: 186 and so outside the cue sports industry, which has long favored the more formal term pocket billiards, the common name for the sport has remained pool.

  6. Ten-ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten-ball

    Ten-ball is a rotation pool game similar to nine-ball, but using ten balls instead of nine, and with the 10 ball instead of the 9 as the "money ball".. Although the game has existed since the early 1960s, its popularity has risen since the early 2000s as a result of concerns that nine-ball has suffered as a result of flaws in its fundamental structure, particularly the ease with which players ...

  7. Portal:Cue sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Cue_sports

    He was the brother of 15-time world snooker champion Joe Davis; the pair were the only two players to win both snooker and English billiards world championships, and Fred is second on the list of those holding most world snooker championship titles, behind Joe. Davis' professional career started in 1929 at the age of 15 as a billiards player.

  8. Straight pool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straight_pool

    Jerome Keogh invented the game in 1910.. Straight pool is derived from an earlier game called continuous pool, [2] in which points are earned for every ball that is pocketed. . In this game, the last object ball is pocketed (not left on the table as in straight pool), and then racked with the rest of them when a new game begins (the player who pocketed the final ball plays the break shot in ...

  9. U.S. Open Pool Championship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Open_Pool_Championship

    The tournament's original venue was Q-Master Billiards pool hall, in Norfolk, Virginia, which hosted the event, other than one year, from 1976 until 1988. [2] From 1997 to 2011, the U.S. Open Men's Division was held at the Chesapeake Conference Center in Chesapeake, Virginia . [ 2 ]