You should probably pick up the table and see if your foot is broken.
For a 9 foot table you should get a 10 foot table runner. This will allow a portion of the runner to hang off each side, as it should.
These can be found as 9 foot, 10 foot, and 12 foot tables.
About 7/8 foot
120 inch pounds = 10 foot pounds.
One foot-pound = 1.3558 Newton-meters.
One that you can fit 10 chairs around. (But let's allow space for leg room, under the table) -A 30-foot circumference, or approximately 10-foot diameter table would serve nicely.
1000
twelve inch pounds equal one foot pound . so 125 inch pounds are about 10 foot lbs.
10
The Brunswick made 10 foot pool tables from at least 1925 to 1940. There were others as well dating from that era and into the 1800's. There have been no new 10 foot pool tables available in the US for many years.
Regulation size pool tables are 8 foot, oversize 8 foot, and 9 foot. The other 2 common sizes are 7 foot and 10 foot. Sizes below 7 foot are rarely built to the standards required for proper play. 12 foot tables have been built but are not for regular use.
The smallest pool tables made that generally conform to regulation pool tables is the 6 foot table. This is often referred to as a junior size. Smaller sizes are generally toys, and larger sizes are in regular use, from 7 foot to 10 foot.