Pink
No.
you have to get the black ball in first time after your last potted ball. if you miss then the other side has automatically won. these are the proper pool rules.
Black - worth 7 points
Midnight. And it was all down to the last black ball for ages.
It can be any ball colour since the game ends when the difference in points is too big to overcome for the other player. That player will then give up. In the majority of games the decision will only be clear at the end and therefore it will often be either the pink or the black ball that will be potted last. The last part of the snooker game consists of potting the non-red colored balls in order of their value: yellow (2), green (3), brown (4), blue (5), pink (6) and black (7). The game is formally over (a) when the final pink is potted and the difference in points between the two players is more than 7 points. In this case the black does not need to be potted and if an attempt to pot it is made and the pot was not in, the game ends formally with the black still on the table, or (b) when the final black ball is potted and the two players do not have the same score (if they do, the black ball will be re-spotted)
If, when playing snooker, you leave you opponent in such a position that he has no legal direct shot to a ball and must curve the cue ball or play a rebound from a cushion, this is called being 'snookered'.
If your Last ball is potted before the black then it is a legal shot and you win. * Added - In 8 Ball, under BCA Rules, APA Rules, and most House Rules this is loss of game.
Potted tulips usually last for about 1-2 weeks before wilting and needing to be replaced.
17 days.
1989.
If you are even with or in front of the second last opponent or the ball at the moment the ball is kicked, then no.
Actually, a ball doesn't only last six pitches. If the batter has 3 balls, and 2 strikes, he can keep fouling the ball out as much as he wants to. This means that a ball can last much longer than six pitches, since fouling out counts as a strike, but only up to the second strike, so a ball can virtually last forever.