Playing 10-ball. Your opponent scratched on the break. This is the first rack of a tournament hot seat match.
I think I might shoot the one in the side by the 8. Follow to run into the 8 and move it a few inches closer to the side. That would give me a good shot on the 2, and make it easier to get on the 5 after the 4. Just have to be careful not to put the 8 on the rail by the 10. Want to keep the 8 makeable into the side.
Yes, the 4 to the 5 to the 6 is definitely the key to running this rack. This is actually the first rack of Charlie Bryant vs. Doug Young from the tournament at Bogies. Charlie fails to negotiate the 4-5-6.
Aaron
Did he miscue due to lack of chalk? :wink:
I like Neil's first shot to lessen the difficulty of the 5 to the 6. Good call Neil. No way I'm going for a 3 foul attempt on this rack. Did ChalkBilly nudge the 8 as Neil would?
KK9 <-- couldn't resist some ribbing
...Close eyes and try to either hit 8 or pass between 5/ rail
Stop stealing my moves.
Assuming that he was straight in on the 5 to the pocket where the 4 is, I think I would have either tired to use a lot of high left with a firm stroke and spun over to the 6, or, stopped on the 5 and banked the 6 cross side.
Assuming that he was straight in on the 5 to the pocket where the 4 is, I think I would have either tired to use a lot of high left with a firm stroke and spun over to the 6, or, stopped on the 5 and banked the 6 cross side.
Dammit, Aaron. That is too many balls.
1 into bottom L corner. Stop
2 into top R corner. Roll into rail L side of 10, inside kitchen.
3 into bottom R corner. Low R spin to stop in center of table.
4 into top L corner. Close eyes and try to eithe hit 8 or pass between 5/ rail, depending on what looks better. Cross fingers too.
5 into top L (or bottom L) pocket. CB must go to other side rail, or you are banking 6.
The bank is not a horrible shot. A speed bump.
7 depends on the 6, but one is looking good from here.
I'll play devils advocate. I am assuming the 1 sneaks past the 8 in the side? If you do the shot Neil mentions you better be very careful on two things (speed and your angle of the bump on the 8). You can get in a lot of trouble if you don't nudge the 8 correctly which entails both the speed and angle. Neil's goal is to bump the 8 closer to the side pocket however you don't want it to bump by the rail close to the side by the 10 which might make for a difficult shot on either the 8 in the opposite corner or the short rack.
If the shooter doesn't like that approach the leave on the 4 will determine what shot he shoots. He can either 1. make the 4 in the corner setting up a safety on the 5 depending on his leave, 2. cut the 4 thin and using speed either bump into 5 or squeeze behind the 5. If you don't like the bump ball method (not high percentage to get a good leave/bump) then option 1 might be a good bet. Since the 5 is fairly close to the 8 a safety might not be too hard to do here.
Then why in the World would you get all those other balls off the table? The 1-10 combo is the better shot, between those 2.1 in the corner, draw cue ball above side pocket.
2 in side.
3 in corner, leave an angle on the 4.
4 in corner, take your pick. 5-10 combo or use high outside to bump the 8 ball.
There is the possibility of a bad roll bumping the 8 but if you bump it softly you should be ok. After that, assuming you get an angle on the 5, the rack is open.
The 5-10 looks like a pretty easy combo, I would probably go for that.
Then why in the World would you get all those other balls off the table? The 1-10 combo is the better shot, between those 2.