Yes. If your object ball is the black 8 ball and it is not the ball that is hit first, it is a foul.
If the black 8 ball is the object ball and a foul occurs during the shot, the game is over. This foul is loss of game.
Well, I'm guessing it has to do with the Turkey balls, which are the things that hang from the turkey's neck. So a ball in foul territory is a foul ball, and the things under a turkey's neck are fowl balls. That's all I got. Anybody else?
A "strike" is a "fair ball" -- one that passed through the strike zone. A "foul ball" is one that passed outside of the strike zone. "Foul" is also used to refer to a ball that hits the batter. Baseball commentators got into the habit of saying "ball!" instead of "foul ball" to avoid a lengthy explanation of exactly what happened.
It depends on how the game is being played. Most of the time, foul balls don't count as a strike; you can hit a ton of foul balls while you're up to bat and it won't matter. If you're playing a strict game of baseball, though, if you go up to bat and hit two foul balls, they count as strikes. Then, if you miss the ball or whatever, that would be your third strike. And you're out. :) Foul balls count as strikes when every the batter does not have two strikes, once a batter gets two strikes foul balls are no longer counted as strikes.
yes and no. a foul ball on the third strike goes uncaught then it is not a third strike. if a foul ball is caught on the third strike, including a foul tip, the batter is out.
The location of the baseball decides if the ball is fair or foul. If the ball is in foul territory, the ball is foul regardless of the position of the player touching the ball. The same applies for balls in fair territory. This is opposite the ruling in football.
Ball girls are female employees of a baseball team. They sit along the foul lines to jump up and retrieve foul balls hit on their foul line. They are usually young and at least reasonably attractive.
If you're referring to a foul, it's ball in hand for the incoming player, provided it is a cue ball foul (i.e. scratch, ball off table, hitting opponents ball before your own, etc.). I believe some fouls result in loss of turn, but not ball in hand (i.e. - an object ball leaves the table).
Yes, foul balls are a common occurrence in baseball and can happen during any game. They occur when a batted ball lands outside the designated fair territory, typically when a player swings and misses or makes contact but sends the ball in a direction that goes foul. Foul balls can add excitement to the game, especially when fans try to catch them. They're also significant in counting strikes; a player can accumulate up to three strikes before being out, but foul balls do not count against that limit unless it's a foul tip caught by the catcher.
Session foul you put the black ball in the middle And its ball at hand.
Any foul when shooting on the black is an automatic loss for the player who fouled.If the white follows the black in, then you lose in any case.the person who pots the white and black ball at the same time loses.
There is no limit on the number of foul balls.