This article is within the scope of WikiProject Cue sports, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of pool, carom billiards and other cue sports on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Cue sportsWikipedia:WikiProject Cue sportsTemplate:WikiProject Cue sportscue sports
Internal pages: Something like: [2][3]). Such pages are not fluff, but can be good places to find recruits for the project, possibly including subject-matter experts, especially if cross-referenced to the project. Also, Wikipedia:WikiProject Deletion sorting/Cue sports (cf. [4][5][6]).
Create timelines, both textual and graphical. See link for various guidelines and examples. We need an overall one for cue sports generally, and more specific ones as we drill down into more specific topics (timeline of nine-ball, timeline of Willie Mosconi's career, etc.).
Form sections: Exhibition game needs section on cue sports; could later form a new article with "Main article..." xref to it. What other general articles need cue sports sections?
Images: improve articles with images from commons; create pics and add them to commons as GFDL/CC-by/PD.
Add: {{Sport overview}} to main articles of cue games that are real sports; medal table tags where they apply (see Ding Junhui for example).
Insert: Cue sports events (tournament results, etc.) into the "year in sports" categories (e.g. 1965 in sports), using {{subst:Cue sports heading}} if that year doesn't have one yet.
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Snooker, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of snooker on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.SnookerWikipedia:WikiProject SnookerTemplate:WikiProject SnookerSnooker
...on the basis of no sources and non-notability; the Internet gamer nicknames of one of the variants' alleged originators is a dead giveaway (as is "deathmatch", an e-gamer term). The especially-offending second entry is not only a self-confessing "distant cousin" to the article topic but clearly unrelated in any way at all. The entries (with cleanup, and with further cleanup-tagging):
==="[[Woburn, Massachusetts|Woburn]] short-course" variant===
{{Clarifyme|date=April 2008}} This alternative, with many regional variants,{{debatable|reason=How could something named for a single town have "many regional variants"?}} involves a predetermined arrangement of three to five balls with a predetermined [[par (golf)|par]]. Each arrangement constitutes a hole, with eighteen holes to a game. No hole is like any other, and pars range between three to five per hole.{{fact}}
<nowiki>==="Blind man's deathmatch" variant===
This distant cousin of pool golf[dubious – discuss] was developed by Mr. Mooney and The Beast.[who?] The rack consists of ten to twenty balls (depending upon availability) arranged in a straight line (touching each other) with the far ball touching the cushion at the foot end of the table and extending towards the head through the foot spot. In this fast-paced, low-skill duel between archenemies,[neutrality is disputed] balls are kept in continuous motion[clarification needed] until the table is cleared.[citation needed]<nowiki>