I feel that the two rail route I took, or the draw off the 5 are about equal. Equal when you know HOW to aim them. I went the 2 rail route, it went as shown, the cb came in just behind the 7, lightly bumped it out, and the cb ended up just off the rail for a duck on the 6. Yes, I will be the first to admit that there was a certain amount of luck involved, but it was also planned luck.
This is what I did- I first decided on the two rail route, I'll get into why in the next post. Looking at the diagram, you know see an added 3 ball, 10 ball, and 1 ball. The one is the spot I want to hit by the 7. The 3 ball obviously is the ghost ball. The ten ball lies as close as I can guess to halfway on the line between the spot on the rail I want to hit by the 7, which is the 1 ball, and the ghost ball. I then take that spot, (the 10 ball) and find the angle with my cue to the pocket I want to go around. I then transfer that angle with my cue to come through the ghost ball, and see just where that hits the rail. I mark that spot in my mind.
Next, I look at the tangent line off the 5 ball, and see just where that hits the rail. In this case, they happen to be the same spot! Makes everything easier! If they weren't the same spot, I would now know if I needed draw or follow to hit the "10 ball" spot. That spot is where I want the cb to hit the rail.
Now, on paper, this works great. Different tables, different conditions, can change it up a little. But, the system works pretty accurately, and gives you something to actually aim for instead of just guessing. In my case, it just so happened to work out perfectly this time. It could just as well of hit the 7 instead of the rail, and I might even of got hooked.
This system, once you are used to it, only takes seconds to do. And, it gives you a definite aim point instead of just a guess that might be clouded at the moment by pressure in the game.
Since we are playing the ghost, we can't choose to cut the 4B to the side rail (just below the side) & leave our opponent on a 4B-8B combo...CB frozen to the end rail.
If it was me i would play hard bottom left off the four ball to head rail and down table for the breakout. If you wait and do it on the 5 to much chance it doesnt roll to a good shot if you break it out on the 4 you can use the 5 to get back in position. Actually it would be better to hard left with a little bottom.
jmho
monty
try it 5 times, and let us know how many times you broke up the 6-7 that way. I think, at least for me, it's a pretty low percentage shot.
I just went down and tried it. Good luck.Mosconiacs looks good on paper, but when you set it up as shown on a table, good luck even hitting the rail on the side that the 4 goes in. It can be done, but you sure aren't hitting it as far down as he showed!
try it 5 times, and let us know how many times you broke up the 6-7 that way. I think, at least for me, it's a pretty low percentage shot.
I just went down and tried it. Good luck.Mosconiacs looks good on paper, but when you set it up as shown on a table, good luck even hitting the rail on the side that the 4 goes in. It can be done, but you sure aren't hitting it as far down as he showed!
How would I know? Well, in the opening scenes of the Last Dragon when the student is going through his martial art practice routine, his master was shooting arrows at him to which the student would chop before they hit him. The arrows had a red band on them.
The master shot one arrow with a blue band to which the student caught the arrow instead of breaking it.
The master asked of the student "How did you know that was the blue arrow?"
The student replied " I do not know how I knew, I just knew."
The master replied " I can not teach you no more. You have reached the highest level....to know without knowing."
So, you just have to know what to do based on hours, hours and hours of practice with some gut instincts thrown in to boot.
I feel that the two rail route I took, or the draw off the 5 are about equal. Equal when you know HOW to aim them. I went the 2 rail route, it went as shown, the cb came in just behind the 7, lightly bumped it out, and the cb ended up just off the rail for a duck on the 6. Yes, I will be the first to admit that there was a certain amount of luck involved, but it was also planned luck.
This is what I did- I first decided on the two rail route, I'll get into why in the next post. Looking at the diagram, you know see an added 3 ball, 10 ball, and 1 ball. The one is the spot I want to hit by the 7. The 3 ball obviously is the ghost ball. The ten ball lies as close as I can guess to halfway on the line between the spot on the rail I want to hit by the 7, which is the 1 ball, and the ghost ball. I then take that spot, (the 10 ball) and find the angle with my cue to the pocket I want to go around. I then transfer that angle with my cue to come through the ghost ball, and see just where that hits the rail. I mark that spot in my mind.
Next, I look at the tangent line off the 5 ball, and see just where that hits the rail. In this case, they happen to be the same spot! Makes everything easier! If they weren't the same spot, I would now know if I needed draw or follow to hit the "10 ball" spot. That spot is where I want the cb to hit the rail.
Now, on paper, this works great. Different tables, different conditions, can change it up a little. But, the system works pretty accurately, and gives you something to actually aim for instead of just guessing. In my case, it just so happened to work out perfectly this time. It could just as well of hit the 7 instead of the rail, and I might even of got hooked.
This system, once you are used to it, only takes seconds to do. And, it gives you a definite aim point instead of just a guess that might be clouded at the moment by pressure in the game.