I was reading the Kamui chalk thread and Neil posted this.
It was one of those things that got me wondering if I am hitting the cueball where I think I am hitting the cueball and I realized I don't actually concsiously think about where I am actually contacting the cueball when I am shooting pool. I have been shoot alot in the last couple days getting ready for the league playoffs and one thing that is very clear, I don't think about the actual contact point of any given shot. I know the quadrant I am hitting the cueball in on a shot, but I do not actually think about how many tips to the side or how many tips of tops or bottoms I am using on a shot.
If someone asked me where I think I am hitting the cueball I would actually have to get down in my stroke and for the first time consciously try to determine on any given shot where precisely I am stroking the cueball to get a given resultant motion. When I am aiming a shot it is the resultant motion of the cueball that I am in effect "aiming" and it is a combination of where the tip is striking the cueball, the angle of the shot, the speed I hit the shot, the distance between the cueball and the object ball, tons of factors none of which I actually consciously think about.
Do many of you out there on a long draw shot think to yourself "ok, I have a straight in shot with the cueball 5 feet from the object ball and I need to draw the cueball straight back 6 feet for shape on the next ball. I need about 2 tips of bottom, I need to hit the shot at about 60% stroke speed for this shot." And then you actively attempt to aim to hit 2 tips below center and at a speed that is technically known to you as 60% based on some rating of your stroke speeds you use?
I personally look at the shot seeing how much the cueball needs to be drawn and the actual thought of "where" I am hitting the cueball is not something I focus on. I am instead visualizing the shot and getting a sense of how shooting the shot with the proper spin to get the desired cueball motion will "feel" and then I shoot the shot with that mental guide of the proper shot and desired cueball motion in my head.
How many of us really actually know where we are hitting the cueball or actively think about such things while we are playing the game? I myself in the last two days of 20 hours of pool playing did not actually think about the tip contact point on a single shot that I played.
Neil said:Most amateurs do NOT hit the cb where they think they are hitting it. When they do start hitting it where they want to, amazing things start to happen!
It was one of those things that got me wondering if I am hitting the cueball where I think I am hitting the cueball and I realized I don't actually concsiously think about where I am actually contacting the cueball when I am shooting pool. I have been shoot alot in the last couple days getting ready for the league playoffs and one thing that is very clear, I don't think about the actual contact point of any given shot. I know the quadrant I am hitting the cueball in on a shot, but I do not actually think about how many tips to the side or how many tips of tops or bottoms I am using on a shot.
If someone asked me where I think I am hitting the cueball I would actually have to get down in my stroke and for the first time consciously try to determine on any given shot where precisely I am stroking the cueball to get a given resultant motion. When I am aiming a shot it is the resultant motion of the cueball that I am in effect "aiming" and it is a combination of where the tip is striking the cueball, the angle of the shot, the speed I hit the shot, the distance between the cueball and the object ball, tons of factors none of which I actually consciously think about.
Do many of you out there on a long draw shot think to yourself "ok, I have a straight in shot with the cueball 5 feet from the object ball and I need to draw the cueball straight back 6 feet for shape on the next ball. I need about 2 tips of bottom, I need to hit the shot at about 60% stroke speed for this shot." And then you actively attempt to aim to hit 2 tips below center and at a speed that is technically known to you as 60% based on some rating of your stroke speeds you use?
I personally look at the shot seeing how much the cueball needs to be drawn and the actual thought of "where" I am hitting the cueball is not something I focus on. I am instead visualizing the shot and getting a sense of how shooting the shot with the proper spin to get the desired cueball motion will "feel" and then I shoot the shot with that mental guide of the proper shot and desired cueball motion in my head.
How many of us really actually know where we are hitting the cueball or actively think about such things while we are playing the game? I myself in the last two days of 20 hours of pool playing did not actually think about the tip contact point on a single shot that I played.