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File:Russian billiards balls.jpg
Russian pyramid game setup, with the Template:Cueglosss in a triangle Template:Cuegloss at the Template:Cuegloss of the table, and the Template:Cuegloss in front of (up-table of) the Template:Cuegloss (Template:Cuegloss).

Russian pyramid, also known as Russian billiards (Template:Langx, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), is a form of billiards played on a large billiard table with narrow pockets. It is played across Russia and several former Soviet/Eastern Bloc countries. In the West, the game is known as pyramid billiards, or simply pyramid.

EquipmentEdit

  • Table: Playing-surface sizes vary. The official tournament size is Template:Convert, the same size used for professional snooker. Smaller sizes as used by other cue sports are also found in less-formal venues. The Template:Cuegloss used in Russian pyramid tables are typically much thinner than those of pool and snooker tables, but is occasionally heated, similar to carom billiards tables.
  • Balls: There are sixteen balls, fifteen Template:Cuegloss and a Template:Cuegloss, but in contrast to pool, the numbered balls are usually white, and the cue ball is red or yellow. They are typically larger and heavier than other types of billiard balls. The official tournament size is Template:Cvt in diameter, weighing approximately 255 g (9 oz), while smaller balls – e.g., Template:Cvt, Template:Cvt, and Template:Convert (regular pool ball size) – are available for smaller table sizes. The old tournament size was 68 mm in diameter.
  • Pockets: The Template:Cuegloss are only 3 mm (approx. Template:Frac in) wider than the diameter of the ball, while the Template:Cuegloss are 12–13 mm (approx. Template:FracTemplate:Frac in) wider than the diameter of the ball. This requires great precision to pocket a ball in such tight pockets.
  • Cues: Due to larger ball size, the cues used for Russian pyramid are slightly thicker and heavier than those of pool cues, and the tip diameter is wider (up to 15 mm), in comparison to 10–13 mm used in pool cues. Specialty shots like Template:Cuegloss and Template:Cuegloss are usually more difficult to perform with a Russian pyramid cue, due to its heavier nature. These shots are also not allowed in official tournaments, doing so may result in a Template:Cuegloss.

Rule variationsEdit

File:Russian billiards ball at a corner pocket.jpg
Russian pyramid ball near the corner pocket. The relative sizes of the ball and pocket make the game very challenging.

There are several rule variations of Russian pyramid. All games begin with fifteen numbered white balls Template:Cuegloss in a Template:Cuegloss Template:Cuegloss, as in straight pool, eight-ball, and blackball. Players may pocket any object balls on the table regardless of number, and the first player to pocket eight or more balls wins the Template:Cuegloss. In addition, shots do not have to be Template:Cuegloss. Depending on the game variant, some specific balls may have to be in specific positions within the rack. The first player firmly Template:Cueglosss the rack with the Template:Cuegloss from just in front of the Template:Cuegloss. The most common varieties are the following, each of which has slight local variations on the rules:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • Free pyramid (also known as American pyramid)
Any ball may be used as the cue ball. Players can pocket the ball they struck if it hits another ball first, with the goal being to Template:Cuegloss the struck ball off one or more other balls into a pocket. Should the struck ball be pocketed without striking any other balls, the shot is a Template:Cuegloss, and that ball is Template:Cuegloss behind the baulk line.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • Dynamic pyramid (also known as Siberian pyramid or Nevsky pyramid)
Only one ball is the cue ball. Players can pocket the cue ball with a carom shot off another ball and then the scorer must choose an object ball to be taken off the table. The player then has Template:Cuegloss and may place it anywhere on the table but may not pocket it until the next stroke; otherwise, it is a foul.
  • Combined pyramid (also known as Moscow pyramid or combo pyramid)
The rules are the same as in dynamic pyramid, except that, after the cue ball is pocketed, the cue ball is spotted between the Template:Cuegloss (Template:Cuegloss) and head or baulk, but not on top of that line; from here until the next stroke, balls can be only pocketed in the side and far-corner pockets. In pool, this part of the table is called the Template:Cuegloss and the Russian equivalent is {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (dom), 'house'.
  • Classical pyramid
The rules are similar to fifteen-ball pool. The object is to score at least 71 points. For each correctly pocketed object ball, the player wins the number of points on the ball (except for the 1-ball, which scores 11 points). The last remaining ball on the table, regardless of its number, is worth 10 points. The total number of points is 130.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • 14.1 pyramid (also known as straight pyramid or long pyramid)
The rules are very similar to free pyramid, except that a frame continues until 14 balls are pocketed, similar to straight pool; these 14 balls are then re-spotted into an incomplete pyramid.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> The objective is to score at least a given number of points.

  • Scratch pyramid (also known as SVOI)
Similar to free pyramid, but pocketing object balls before the cue ball is a foul; therefore, the player must pocket the cue ball after hitting object balls. Other balls can be pocketed as long as the cue ball is potted first.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In popular cultureEdit

Versions of the game have featured prominently in notable Russian films such as The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed (1979) and The New Adventures of the Elusive Avengers (1968). An episode of the popular animated television series Kikoriki has two characters playing the game. The main characters of Dead Man's Bluff, or Zhmurki (Russian: Жмурки) play Russian pool in the bar scene.

A Russian pool configuration can be seen in “Tulsa King” starring Sylvester Stallone in Season 1, episode 5, while making a phone call, he walks around a pool table with all-white balls racked, and a white cue ball.

Russian pyramid has been adapted into video games, both in stand-alone form and as a play mode in multi-cue-sports video games. Many recent releases have been mobile games for Android and iOS.Template:Cn

"Russian pool"Edit

File:Russian and American pool ball comparison.jpg
Comparison of the 68 mm (Template:Frac in) Russian and the 57 mm (Template:Frac in) common-style pool ball.

Colored numbered balls for playing eight-ball, nine-ball, and other pool games on Russian billiards tables are also produced. The balls are 68 mm (Template:Frac in) in diameter, like the standard ones for Russian pyramid, and thus much larger than the American-style balls they are patterned after Template:Crossreference.

WPA World Pyramid ChampionshipEdit

Sanctioned by the World Pool-Billiard Association (WPA).

Year Winner
2019 Template:Flagicon Semyon Zaitsev
2018 Template:Flagicon Serghei Krîjanovski
2017 Template:Flagicon Iosif Abramov
2016 Template:Flagicon Alikhan Karaneyev
2015 Template:Flagicon Vladislav Osminin
2006 Template:Flagicon Pavel Mekhovov
2005 Template:Flagicon Yury Paschinsky
2003 Template:Flagicon Yaroslav Vynokur
2002 Template:Flagicon Ilya Kirichkov
2001 Template:Flagicon Kanybek Sagyndykov
2000 Template:Flagicon Evgeny Stalev (2)
1999 Template:Flagicon Evgeny Stalev

ReferencesEdit

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