I have a Kinister video by George Fels. Is there any thing else that might be helpful, specifically setting up the breakout shot to go to the next rack? I thought I would ask here before going to the straight pool section.
I have a Kinister video by George Fels. Is there any thing else that might be helpful, specifically setting up the breakout shot to go to the next rack? I thought I would ask here before going to the straight pool section.
I have a Kinister video by George Fels. Is there any thing else that might be helpful, specifically setting up the breakout shot to go to the next rack? I thought I would ask here before going to the straight pool section.
Try shooting Straights with your feet closer to the cue ball than for 9-Ball. As you bend down you will naturally assume a shorter bridge.
This allows for a vigorous stroke with softer results, less cue ball roll, more delicate shape on the cue ball. Alternately you can try choking up on the cue stick with your shooting hand, but moving from say, a 9-inch long bridge to a 7-inch or 5-inch bridge will let you work on a lot of the clusters near the bottom four pockets.![]()
Nobody mentioned it, but Blackjack (David Sapolis) has some great information about 14.1 on his site. My other suggestion would be to take a straight pool lesson. Books and videos are okay, but cannot answer questions like a hands-on instructor can.
Scott Lee
http://poolknowledge.com
Perhaps. A lot of regular 9-Ball players should change their bridge to shorten it overall anyway. Once you get the control Straight Pool demands, it can only help with 9-Ball and 8-Ball, right?Matt...Changing stance and/or bridge length is unnecessary when changing games. Changing those things because a particular shot is a different story.
Scott Lee
http://poolknowledge.com
Try shooting Straights with your feet closer to the cue ball than for 9-Ball. As you bend down you will naturally assume a shorter bridge.
This allows for a vigorous stroke with softer results, less cue ball roll, more delicate shape on the cue ball. Alternately you can try choking up on the cue stick with your shooting hand, but moving from say, a 9-inch long bridge to a 7-inch or 5-inch bridge will let you work on a lot of the clusters near the bottom four pockets.![]()
Perhaps. A lot of regular 9-Ball players should change their bridge to shorten it overall anyway. Once you get the control Straight Pool demands, it can only help with 9-Ball and 8-Ball, right?
George Fels: Mastering Pool <---a MUST READ!
Phil Capelle: Play your best straight pool <---a MUST READ!
Arthur *Babe* Cranfield: The straight pool bible <---a MUST READ!
These 3 books will help you extremly! I would start in this order:
Mastering Pool by George: Very easy and funny to read, tons of knowledge! Make you learn to think!
Then *the straight pool bible* by Cranfield*
and then, after you *practiced* a bit with your newly earned knowledge:
Buy Jim Rempe s "How to run 100" and "how to run a rack"
Watch additional some 14.1 matches of the pros-helps also VERY much.
Then you can start to work with Capelles *play your best straight pool*.
hope this helps
lg
Ingo
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I never thought i would say something like thatalmost feeling bad...but i have not Fran s opinion on Capelles last book. It s nothing than a few small vids showing some pros playing the last 4-5 shots of the rack to get on the breakball. In my opinion nothing to learn much from-very overestimated in my personal opinion. (forgive me Fran, *hugs*)
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Straights? Seriously?
A shorter bridge isn't a bad idea on close shots if the player is normally a 9-Ball player with a long bridge length. However, I have great difficulty getting past the 'straights' thing. That sounds so amateurish, it isn't funny.
I hear ya, Fran. Where I'm from, if someone says "straights" -- it's usually in the form of a question, like "you wanna shoot some straights?" -- as in, "do you want to shoot some 14.1?"
-Sean
Try shooting Straights with your feet closer to the cue ball than for 9-Ball. As you bend down you will naturally assume a shorter bridge.
This allows for a vigorous stroke with softer results, less cue ball roll, more delicate shape on the cue ball. Alternately you can try choking up on the cue stick with your shooting hand, but moving from say, a 9-inch long bridge to a 7-inch or 5-inch bridge will let you work on a lot of the clusters near the bottom four pockets.![]()
Matt...Changing stance and/or bridge length is unnecessary when changing games. Changing those things because a particular shot is a different story.
Scott Lee
http://poolknowledge.com
Perhaps. A lot of regular 9-Ball players should change their bridge to shorten it overall anyway. Once you get the control Straight Pool demands, it can only help with 9-Ball and 8-Ball, right?
Straights? Seriously?
A shorter bridge isn't a bad idea on close shots if the player is normally a 9-Ball player with a long bridge length. However, I have great difficulty getting past the 'straights' thing. That sounds so amateurish, it isn't funny.
I hear ya, Fran. Where I'm from, if someone says "straights" -- it's usually in the form of a question, like "you wanna shoot some straights?" -- as in, "do you want to shoot some 14.1?"
-Sean
Another term that I absolutely love is 'straight eight.'