Scott, Randy, Stan etc. may not be strict charlatans, but certainly are close to being one.
If you spend several hundred dollars with them, you will leave with not much information.
For example, let me take the typical student of Scott's. Let him spend hundreds of dollars with Scott.
Then I will go to the student and ask him the method kicking this ball 2 rails. Then I will ask him how to aim a cut bank shot. The student is very likely to give the wrong answer. Which is not necessarily bad, he is learning. But what is worse, he won't even know where to start.
Scott just wasted his time with a bunch of nonsense.
Listen, no matter what fundamentals Scott teaches you, you're gonna have to spend the same amount of time everyone else has to at the table if you want to get good.
But at the same time, Scott didn't teach you all the kicking methods (which are available for free) and all the banking methods. Buy both of the Beard's banking books for a total of about $60 and you have just spent your money wisely.
It would cost you THOUSANDS to learn those systems from Scott, AND YOU WOULD STILL NEED TO PRACTICE THEM CONSIDERABLY.
JUST BUY THE BOOKS FROM BEARD AND SAVE THOUSANDS.
Whether you buy the books or get lessons from Scott, you still need to hit the practice table the same amount of time.
You're joking right?
Do you have any idea what Scott and the others teach and in what order?
I guarantee that you can learn these things from them. But more importantly they will get your technique in shape so that when you DO buy Freddie's book you can consistently execute the shots contained in it. So you don't have to wonder if Freddie's "system" is wrong or if it's your stroke.
Get real. When I was a diver I spent a lot to go train with Ron O'Brien. Why?
Because Ron O'Brien was a championship diver who had successfully trained many more champions. In other words he knew more about diving than all but a handful of people on Earth. On the whole planet there weren't more than 20 people who could coach at his level.
Scott and Randy and Stan have devoted their lives to learning everything about how to play pool and then how to teach it. I don't even know who you are but I'd be willing to put Scott in the box against you any day of the week if you think he can't coach.
So just to be clear, you want to anonymously go on record as saying that Scott Lee, Stan Shuffett, and Randy Goetlicher are "close to being charlatans"? Because they don't give away their time for free?
How about we just do a little experiment? I will hire Scott Lee and Randy and Stan to train a raw beginner for one month. I will give each one of them $1000 each for 10 hours of instruction (I hope $100 per hour covers it). The student is then free to practice as little as he or she wants to or as much as they want to.
You get another beginner who ONLY gets books to learn from and that beginner MUST practice at least 30 hours in the same month. You are allowed to provide your guy with all the books you think he needs.
At the end of that time my beginner will play yours a round robin of one-pocket, ten-ball, 14.1, and banks.
Can we bet $10,000 on the outcome? That ought to settle the books vs. personal instruction debate.
If you really think that Stan, Scott and Randy are "close" to being charlatans then your money is practically in the bank.
Bet? When and where can we set this up?