I can't help but wonder how anyone could think you could play pool (or anything else) at the highest level without a system. Whether we want to realize it or not there is a conscious or unconcious system for all aspects of pocket billiards. That goes for pocketing balls, playing zone position, lining up your eyes correctly relative to the line of the shot, etc.
The main thing with aiming is the way we connect the two balls together BEFORE getting down on the shot. If anyone doesn't think we have a system for that I will tell them they're living in a fantacy land. The thing that people are missing is there's 2 lines when aiming and one is a edge to center line and other is a center to edge. And to understand this you must stop looking at the balls like they're round....they for all intents and purposes are FLAT and one dimensional for the purposes of aiming.
CJ:
I agree with the bolded parts, but with one proviso -- not all of us aim "center to edge." As you know, there's a "system" in snooker called Back-of-Ball aiming, where you treat the balls as if they are flat discs.
Although I am a student of this game and open to all knowledge -- including studying Stan's DVD (just today, in fact, I popped it in and reviewed) -- I can confidently tell you that Back-of-Ball aiming in no way/shape/fashion resembles or uses the same aim lines as CTE or Pro/1.
For example, in back-of-ball aiming, you do *NOT* look at "center to edge." Rather, it's a fractional "eclipsing" system, where the edge of the cue ball "connects" or "cuts through" a fraction of the object ball, and vise-versa with the object ball -- that object ball's edge "connects" or "cuts through" a fraction of the cue ball. The beauty about this system is that the visuals, once the foundation is built, is AUTOMATIC -- you see them, you get down on them, and you shoot directly *at* them. No pivoting.
Back-of-Ball aiming does require "homework" on the part of the student -- that he/she commit to memory some common ball-to-ball angle relationships. I.e.: 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 2/3, 3/4, 7/8, and "thin" cuts. This is necessary to have a foundation to build on, as the subconscious mind "knows" the adjustments to these foundational ball-to-ball relationships to "finish" the shot.
I go over a lot of this in my 3rd volume of Ultimate Pool Secrets, but after talking to Stan I realized I was doing something else unconsciously that is more of the foundation of his system. This has done wonders for my understanding of how it works and enabled me to "rembember" exactly how I was doing it in my prime. When playing good (gambling) I would expect to miss about one ball an hour (that I was trying to pocket) , and when I was playing great I would not make one ball every 2 hours. When I played Efren in Seattle for 14 hours I missed 6 balls total (that's my top speed). If anyone thinks I didn't use a system to do that that's fine.....but I'd challenge them to shoot a gun or bow without sights, because that's how they're playing pool if they don't know how to line up ABOVE the ball.
I understand why John said some of the things he did about him not having an aiming system....however, I also don't think he would say the same things to me in private....he has a system, and he also knows if he analyzes it too much without completely understanding it his game will suffer greatly....he's right by the way and I think he chose to say the right thing to keep from "thinking" about his unconscious activity too much. However, I for one have sacrafised my level of play quite a bit to figure this stuff out and when I start playing seriously again I'll be just like John and try to "not think about my game"....that's why it's virtually impossible to teach at a world class level and play at that level at the same time....such is life

CJ Wiley
www.cjwiley.com
I think what you're trying to say, CJ, is that in order to play at the top levels, you *have* to be playing from the subconscious. You *CANNOT* have the conscious mind engaged where you're saying things like "
this is a half-ball hit, but because of throw, I have to cut just a hair more." Or, "
I have my two aim lines -- CTEL and OBA -- and I'm going to come down and Pro/1-pivot into the shot." Thinking like this is a recipe for disaster -- i.e. programming yourself for a MISS.
I think *all of you* -- naysayers and yeahsayers -- are thinking
WRONG. That word -- thinking [about aiming] -- is what's keeping this Hatfield and McCoys feud going. And that's
all that "thinking" is good for.
-Sean