Since 1993..I was not able to start until I 18, and already working 12 hours a day in the Army.
Now? Because of money and time? About 4 hours a week if I am lucky. I am separated from family, and money is really tight. They have a $7 special for 5 hours 2PM to 7Pm, and I occasionally get a week where I practice 10 hours.
I did some quick calculations, and realistically, only about 2000-3000 hours. Many of those were spread out over a period of about 5 years, so it was not as concentrated as i would have liked. The first 2 years of that were against poor players, and in a lot of bars, and on poor quality tables in the barracks.
I got ONE month of practice time concentrated all together. In that month, I practiced a full 8 hours daily, + tournament time. I practiced on Brunswick Gold Crowns, and with pool balls on a 6x12 snooker table. Some of those days, I stayed in my home hall and practiced 14 hours instead of going to a tournament.
After that month, my game jumped a few balls, and I began beating
almost everyone except for BCA Grandmaster level players. I had an 87 snooker break on a guy up in Canada during a tournament.
Honestly, my patterns sucked, and I did not hit balls with the right speed at that point. I never had a mentor, and only learned as much as I could by watching, and at that point, i was not smart enough to know what i was looking at.
That's a tricky one. By my own estimation..Not very well. I can beat B level players right now using little more than my knowledge, even when my stroke is kinda funky.
Against these B players, tho...if I am not hitting em that well, I am liable to get beat in races to 9. If I am, I am liable to beat them 9-1, 9-2.
This is not an exaggeration. And it is depressing as hell. I have gambled a bit lately, and come out ahead against some good players. Gave one of those B players the last two, and that was one of the 9-1 sets.
It makes it EXTREMELY hard to match up. Because some good players know if I catch a stroke, I am likely to club them to death, but that is not my consistent game. I can't get weight, because they know what I am capable of..But I can't play even because I know personally where my physical game is at, for lack of practice.
I am one of those players that needs a good amount of practice. I cannot afford that right now because I am supporting two households.
I basically spent the last 2 years in Iraq watching Accu-Stats videos, and I am smart enough to analyze how the pros are hitting shots. My concept of how to play the game (higher probability angles when forced to move the CB long distances, two way shots, kick safeties, etc) is at a much higher level than when I got my month of practice time.
I am now that typical guy in the pool hall with a crapload more knowledge than even the best player in the room, but out of stroke enough that I am the 7 below the best player. The player who ran the 5 pack won't give me more than the 7. We were talking about it last night when I was showing them the "slow stroke" shots, that, even out of stroke, if I would have laid down when I came to town, I would have been able to get the 7&8 ball, and probably would have broke him.
So...It's hard to judge my speed. Do you play BCA? I lead the league in break and runs, and rack and runs, but because of my lack of consistency, I have an overall winning percentage a few points below the top few people in the league. One of those people..I gambled some eight ball with, $20 a rack. He won the first two games..I won the next 6. his backer quit.
Not that I am a "league player" type guy.. (I do it just to play decent players cheaply..) But..just putting it out there.
Right now..I feel like I can't beat anybody. Give me the right type of practice, (I prefer practicing with pool balls on a snooker table to smooth my stroke..) and I am no match for a pro, but could beat most everyone but the top 12 in regional events.
So...I feel fairly confident, that..At least for
myself, if I would have had two years commitment free time to practice, that becoming atop regional player would have been a legitimate goal. I never met any regular player as focused as me, who loved to practice as much as me.
I guess I am just a guy who needs more practice time than the average worldbeater..
Russ