please tell me what u know about rythym, and learning to play my own real rythym......my game has been f...kd....lately all im doing is thinking thinking thinking.....and missing missing missing missing....so i tried to pay more attention to shooting in a fast paced rythym which is how i shoot anyway when im not ANALYZING everything ........
JC, I'm replying to this because at this moment you sound EXACTLY like me. I'm no great pool player, not a pro, I don't hold a PHD in billiards, but I'm an intelligent guy. I know some pro's are gonna "rip me a new one" for saying this, but I believe having no set rhythm. I shoot how I feel at the time when I'm practicing. I'll take a minute between shots sometimes, and other times I'll take 3 seconds

I believe in wholeheartedly in what I call "instinctive" shooting, which involves repetitive speed practice as part of my regime. I practice with headphones on listening to my favorite music in order to block out the outside world and when I get bogged down on my serious practice(taking the time to look 2 to 3 balls ahead, focusing on stance, stroke, aim), I then flip the switch and start doing fast paced drills to help reinforce "instinctive" shooting, which is just my fancy sounding way of saying I don't want to think any more
I'll line up balls down the center of the table and set the ball down on the table in front of each shot and bank cross side or cross corner taking like 1 second from time cue ball touches the felt to striking it. I don't take the time to line the shot up when I set the ball. random placement is best for it, so your eyes and arm learn to automatically do what is necessary to pocket the bank. I make all 15 then pull them back up and alternate their position with depth (instead of all of them lined up down the middle)... as this changes angles slightly and its that slight amount that you brain needs to accept. I rinse and repeat this for about 20 to 30 minutes and then take the balls and line them up across the foot spot end then do the same drill speed cutting the balls into the left and right corners down on the other end of the table. I shoot a left side then quickly rotate and shoot a right side then rotate back and shoot a left. The purpose is not letting my mind get used to shooting one consistent direction.
Before I play devil's advocate to this style, I have to tell ya from my experience, as far as shot reliability, IT WORKS. You'll notice that before, you can't see certain bank shots or you hit them and all sudden the ball went two inches past the target pocket and your wanting to punch the wall :angry: . But as you practice this routine, your brain, eyes, and arm will begin to work instinctively together and make the bank shots consistently. I just started back shooting 6 weeks ago after a 6 year break(long story). and I returned not able to "see" my banks. In 6 weeks of doing those drills, just yesterday during slow practice, I made 4 bank shots in a row (in an 8 ball practice game) without hesitation or confusion. I wasn't "in the zone" or having a "good day". I could just see the shots like I used to see them.
---- Now, I am the kind of person that believes there are two sides to every story. So lemme tell you the "flip" side to all of that above. I lived in Myrtle Beach for 16 years and shot pool for 10 yrs or so there (maybe 2 years was serious pool :sorry: ) Anyhoot, one day while practicing at Smokehouse Billiards, I noticed this middle aged italian woman shooting on one of the tables. She was all serious and slow and methodical. Every shot she looked at everything, took her time, proper stance, stroke etc. She hardly ever missed. I kept watching her do this for atleast 2 hours. I stopped my practice and went to the counter and sat down talking to the owner and had a sandwich to eat. I got his attention, pointing over to her and told him "Man that lady is pretty good player" . He smiled then told me she was on the pro tour and was practicing there for a tournament in I believe charleston sc. Now the moral of the story is(and I don't know if this is true for all pros) ... Being a professional at pool doesn't mean change up in speed, fast bank shooting, etc. From what I could see of her it means repetitive,
consistent play. Consistent in body stance, in stroke, in procedure, in breathing. It seems robotic and boring but maybe thats just the high level of dedication it takes.
I don't know what I'll be if anything in the art of pocket billiards... a showcase shooter or a pro tourist. I want to believe that there is more than one route to travel to get to the professional level, but as of now I can't tell if my route is gonna get me there. But at least I'm having
FUN! :thumbup: