If legally sunk:
If illegally sunk, the opponent gets:
If the white cue ball is potted, then the opponent gets 4 points. Or the equivilent value of the ball being played (blue, pink and black all have higher values than four).
The brown ball is the 4 ball and worth 4 points.
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There are no points for pocketing a particular color ball in billiards. However, snooker awards 1 point for potting (the term used for pocketing by snooker players) a red ball.
There are a total of 22 balls in Snooker. They are as follows:- 15 Red balls - 1 point each 1 White (Cue Ball - used to stike the other balls with a Cue) 1 Black - 7 points 1 Pink - 6 points 1 Blue - 5 points 1 Brown - 4 points 1 Green - 3 points 1 Yellow - 2 points
1 point, unless you were supposed to be aiming for a coloured ball, in which case the opponent receives 4 points as a penalty.
There are 147 points on a snooker table, except fouls pionts.
22 (including the cueball) 15 Red (1 point/ea) 1 Yellow (2 points) 1 Green (3 points) 1 Brown (4 points) 1 Blue (5 points) 1 Pink (6 points) 1 Black (7 points)
The yellow is worth 2 points and the brown is worth 4 points.
I assume you are referring to potting a free ball then black, then 15 reds with blacks and then all the colours. In this situtation the break would be a 155.
The minimum number of strokes required to make a 147 break in a snooker is 15 reds, 15 blacks, 1 yellow, 1 brown, 1 green, 1 blue, 1 pink, and 1 black. So, in theory, 36 shots are needed. However, if you include the initial break-off shot, which nothing would be potted, then the total shots by both players would be 37.
There is only one white ball - the cue ball. It is the only ball which is not meant to be potted at any time.
None. Sinking the white (cue) ball, as with every billiards game, is a foul. The opposing player/team is awarded 4 points (assuming this is the only foul on that shot), the player/team who sunk the white ends their turn, and the opponent has the ball in hand within the D.