Doc Dave I love your diagrams and all the technical stuff, anf If I read and wathed all your material I would first take a math course at Colorado State...But again you are wrong, wrong, wrong...
The bridge hand or the length of the bridge to the ball...Again I repeat HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH AIMING AT THE BALL...First of all the cue has no brain and If you were to asked It where it was you would get no answer...So If you make your bridge 6 or 16" away from the ball It`s all the same...
The pivot is In the finger and not BHE.or some where on the shaft..When you swiel your cue tip shoud be very close to the cue ball and not more than 1/4" from the cue ball...Your right about one thig distance does matter when you use the 90/90 and i`am sure you do not know why...AND I`M NOT TELLINGYOU I only give that info to my students who pay or don`t pay...And most of them don`t ...
Regards Ron V
Read this yet? At least one guy thinks so.
http://billiards.colostate.edu/threads/aiming.html#ninety
Thanks.Dave I know your a great guy and put in many hours in trying to help people play better pool...
I disagree. I don't think the true value a coach or instructor provides is information. Lots of great information can be found in good books and videos (and sometimes, even on the Internet). To me, the most important value a coach offers is the ability and experience to work with a player as a unique individual, catering the instruction to best help that person improve.But the most important thing in learning is the quality of info your coach gives you and how much of t you can retain...
Agreed. For more info, see: benefits of "aiming systems."I believe that all systems work and will improve your game as long as it is easy to teach and easy to learn...The moe complicated you make it by putting out too much info, the harder it is to learn...
Ron, I will certainly take you up on this offer the next time I'm in the NYC area.I wish you and I were able to get together for a day in N.Y.C. I can`t come out there health is not great and just turned 70 wow..So If you were ever to make a plan to get to N.Y.C.
I believe that all systems work and will improve your game as long as it is easy to teach and easy to learn...The moe complicated you make it by putting out too much info, the harder it is to learn...
90/90 works period. I don't care if it makes sense or not. I'm not worried if its geometrically correct or not. What matters is that the ball goes in the hole. Isn't what really matters?
Yes and no. What if a player could have reached the point where he puts the ball in the hole... in half the time?
What aiming systems seem to promise and what they actually deliver may be directly opposite. I think aiming systems may confuse and slow down a player's development. Instead of one simple estimation (where's the contact point on the OB?) or a visual judgment like "this is a 1/3rd ball hit"... a player wastes time on several smaller estimates and guesses and judgment calls.
Basically, that time could have been spent hitting balls instead of jumping through silly hoops that involve pivoting and visualizing invisible circles and lines. What the system player never realizes is he could jump directly to the last step - aim & fire.
Worst is... they get a bad case of wishful thinking and get unrealistic expectations, like expecting their pocketing to double overnight.
Eh - I think the opposite. I think these systems are better for advanced players looking to make their setup systematic, resulting in a rock-solid pre-shot routine. I've never been successful showing any system to a hack.
Eh - I think the opposite. I think these systems are better for advanced players looking to make their setup systematic, resulting in a rock-solid pre-shot routine. I've never been successful showing any system to a hack.
All I know is I was plateaued after 15 years of playing until I learned this stuff. I haven't plateaued since.
Basically, 90/90, CTE, shishkebob, etc, are all pre-shot routines that result in fewer troughs and more peaks in performance.
When I first learned this stuff my game prob dipped-- but as I developed my "crap" initial technique, my improvement has been constant. I bet most people who aren't successful have horrible technique. Crap in=crap out.