By scoring 1 point for a red followed by potting a colour. Then another red followed by a colour & so on. Colours score 2 for Yellow 3 for green 4 for brown 5 for blue 6 for pink & 7 for black.
The related link gives you more information. In summary if a red is potted it is a score of 1. This may be followed by any color where yellow is 2, green is 3, brown is 4, blue is 5, pink is 6 and black is 7. Once all the reds have been potted it is the colors again in sequence. Points are also awarded when an opponent fouls. The minimum foul score is 4 points but a foul on the blue, pink and black is 5, 6 or 7.
scoring shots are.......in/off white = 2 points
in/off red =3 points
pot white = 2 points
pot red = 3 points
canon....hit both balls without potting any = 2 points
these are the only scoring shots there are
scoring is brought to you buy me
it depends on what game (eight ball, nine ball) ect.
There is no "game billiards carom" but the question is presumed to refer to English Billiards, or 3 Pocket.
A score of 100.
147.
147 High Score in Snooker
jimmy white
No, if your score is zero and you play a foul shot your opponent gains points.
ABCD est un parallΓ©logramme tel que BΓT =90 construire la figure
The maximum break under normal circumstances is 147. However 155 is possible under exceptional circumstances
The full name of snooker is SNOOKER.
The only way is if you pot 12 reds at once. Anything else would be a foul shot.
You must pot a red first = 1, then pot a yellow = 2 which equals 3 all together.
If you hit 14 reds and 14 yellows your score would be 42. There is now only 1 red left and hence there is 35 left on the table and thus a winning score. In theory though, the opponent can carry on playing hoping to get a snooker. So the lowest score in which it is impossible to do this would be 15 reds potted with no color plus the colors up to the pink which is 21 and thus 36 is the very lowest possible score to win without the opponent being able to win in any circumstance.
Jack Karnehm has written: 'Billiards and snooker' -- subject(s): Billiards, Snooker 'World snooker' -- subject(s): Billiard players, Biography, History, Snooker 'Understanding Billards and Snooker'