View Full Version : Maximum Break in Snooker
Iguana Boy
05-15-2000, 02:32 PM
For years I have muddled through life believing that the maximum break in snooker is 147.
Yesterday I read in a book (by George MacDonald Fraser) that the maximum theoretical break is 155. From what was written, I gather that a 155 break is almost certain never to happen, but that it is possible within the rules.
Any ideas how one would do this?
Lance Turbo
05-15-2000, 03:10 PM
Check out
http://www.stud.ifi.uio.no/~hermunar/Snooker/Plr/records.shtml
A veritable wealth of info on snooker records. It explains how the maximum theoretical break is 155, and how to accomplish it. I have no idea what any of it means, because I'm not from wherever the hell they play snooker.
LouisB
05-15-2000, 03:32 PM
Iguana Boy, I can't help with the snooker but George MacDonald Frazer(sp?) is a favorite of mine. What book did you read this in? Have you read the "Flashman" books?
yabob
05-15-2000, 04:10 PM
I was at a university once that had a couple of snooker tables in addition to the pool tables in the student union. Every so often you'd see somebody trying to play pool on the snooker tables, probably wondering why they weren't playing very well, and why the markings on the table were so funny.
(a snooker table is slightly bigger, and snooker balls are smaller than pool balls. Snooker pockets have sharp, rather than rounded, corners. A pool ball will actually fit into the pockets, but it is way more difficult than sinking them on a pool table.)
They also had a three-cushion billiards table. You'd see people get their rack of balls at the counter, plop them down on the billiard table, then do a double take as they noticed the lack of pockets ...
Lessee, 15 + 7*15 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 = 147, without exceptional circumstances. Yup.
(basic idea of snooker - you have 15 red balls, and balls numbered 2 through 7. Potting a red ball gives you a point and the right to shoot a numbered ball for that many points. The numbered balls come back out on their spots again after being sunk until all the red balls are gone, then the numbered balls are sunk in rotation.)
Suspicious mind
05-15-2000, 04:29 PM
I suppose in theory you can get 155 if your opponent not only makes a foul stroke but also snookers you behind a colour while all the reds are still on the table. In these circumstances, you can either force your opponent to play again or you can select a free ball. A free ball means choosing one of the colours to act as a red, except in this case the ball is replaced on the table after potting it. That's how you get sixteen 'reds' and hence a 155 break. This is extremely unlikely to happen. I can't think of a single professional player who managed to get a free ball while all the reds were on the table, and I can only think of 5 televised 147 breaks (Davis, Thorburn, Watanna, Hendry, White) in the last twenty years, although there's probably been a couple more (I think Hendry has two).
Lance Turbo
05-15-2000, 04:52 PM
From the link I provided earlier, which apparently has not been read by posters between then and now.
The highest snooker break is not, as previously reported, Tony Drago's and Eddie Manning's 149s. It's Wally West's 151. He made the break in the final of a club handicap at Hounslow Lucania in 1976 against Butch Rogers.
Wally won the first frame with the aid of a 104. In the second, Butch clipped the blue and left Wally snookered. Wally potted green as his free ball with a brown to follow. He then took 14 red and blacks and a pink off the last red. He then cleared up to make the 151.
Tony Drago's (Malta) (b. 22 Sep 1965) 149 is believed to be the second highest break ever made. It was in a practice match against young up-and-coming amateur Nick Manning at the West Norwood Snooker Club.
Drago broke off and snookered Manning behind the brown. Manning tried to escape from the snooker but left a free ball. Drago took the brown as the free ball and then the brown again for four more points and followed that with 15 reds, 13 blacks, a pink and a blue and all the colours. In these very exceptional circumstances, the maximum break is 155.
Iguana Boy
05-15-2000, 05:27 PM
Aha!!
Thank you all, now I understand.
LouisB, this was in one of the McAuslan books (McAuslan in the Rough) which, to me are his best works. I have read only one of the Flashman books, although my brother has read more.
I've also read The Pyrates, which really appealed to my sense of humour.
PS I know GMF's son! But only through my work, and I don't really know him that well.
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