Players want to get better, but they think the solution will come to them in their dreams in the middle of the night.
I don't understand why they wont get lessons or coaching, and learn what others have already busted their buts to learn. !
LOL
People like to use the word they in order to give some appearance of relevance to their statement. They this, they that and so on.
Taking lessons is not needed to improve in pool. It's a myth. It's something that those in the market of selling lessons want you to believe. Those that took lessons wants you to believe this so that don't feel bad for taking lesson when not needed.
Practice is what improves your game nothing more or nothing less. No lesson, if you feel you needed them, will improve your game without practice.
And this idea if you don't take lessons you don't want to improve and lazy is absurd. I've never seen so many people that know what eveyone is about,what motivates, what works for them.
Of course I practice what I preach. I'm back on my 4-5 hour practice days again after a summer slow from putting in over 1850 hours at the table last year. This is how I've improved and no lessons would ever have given the info and experience that putting in those hours have done.
I say unless you put in more time than me than y'all are lazy,uncommitted to improving your game.
People like to use the word they in order to give some appearance of relevance to their statement. They this, they that and so on.
Taking lessons is not needed to improve in pool. It's a myth. It's something that those in the market of selling lessons want you to believe. Those that took lessons wants you to believe this so that don't feel bad for taking lesson when not needed.
Practice is what improves your game nothing more or nothing less. No lesson, if you feel you needed them, will improve your game without practice.
And this idea if you don't take lessons you don't want to improve and lazy is absurd. I've never seen so many people that know what eveyone is about,what motivates, what works for them.
Of course I practice what I preach. I'm back on my 4-5 hour practice days again after a summer slow from putting in over 1850 hours at the table last year. This is how I've improved and no lessons would ever have given the info and experience that putting in those hours have done.
I say unless you put in more time than me than y'all are lazy,uncommitted to improving your game.
And here is a lttle message from the real world...
Some people can't afford lessons.
Some people don't have qualified instructors near enough to them.
Some people don't have a table t home to.practice on, and practicing 3-5 hours a day at a pool room isn't cheap, either.
Some people have work and family obligations that contributes to the responses above this one.
Some people do their best by getting as much information as they can, when they can, and trying to utilize that in the limited time they have at the table.
And some people here on AZB like to paint with a very broad brush, assuming that just because a person doesnt get lessons and spend much of every day practicing then that person has no real desire to get better. At whatever rate he/she can manage.
Carry on. After all, I obviously don't want to get better at this game, berate me and those like me some more.
People like to use the word they in order to give some appearance of relevance to their statement. They this, they that and so on.
Taking lessons is not needed to improve in pool. It's a myth. It's something that those in the market of selling lessons want you to believe. Those that took lessons wants you to believe this so that don't feel bad for taking lesson when not needed.
Practice is what improves your game nothing more or nothing less. No lesson, if you feel you needed them, will improve your game without practice.
And this idea if you don't take lessons you don't want to improve and lazy is absurd. I've never seen so many people that know what eveyone is about,what motivates, what works for them.
Of course I practice what I preach. I'm back on my 4-5 hour practice days again after a summer slow from putting in over 1850 hours at the table last year. This is how I've improved and no lessons would ever have given the info and experience that putting in those hours have done.
I say unless you put in more time than me than y'all are lazy,uncommitted to improving your game.
And here is a lttle message from the real world...
Some people can't afford lessons.
Some people don't have qualified instructors near enough to them.
Some people don't have a table t home to.practice on, and practicing 3-5 hours a day at a pool room isn't cheap, either.
Some people have work and family obligations that contributes to the responses above this one.
Some people do their best by getting as much information as they can, when they can, and trying to utilize that in the limited time they have at the table.
And some people here on AZB like to paint with a very broad brush, assuming that just because a person doesnt get lessons and spend much of every day practicing then that person has no real desire to get better. At whatever rate he/she can manage.
Carry on. After all, I obviously don't want to get better at this game, berate me and those like me some more.
Players want to get better, but they think the solution will come to them in their dreams in the middle of the night.
I don't understand why they wont get lessons or coaching, and learn what others have already busted their buts to learn. !
LOL
Players want to get better, but they think the solution will come to them in their dreams in the middle of the night.
I don't understand why they wont get lessons or coaching, and learn what others have already busted their buts to learn. !
LOL
To be honest...I know people that paid good money for lessons and after all these years, they shoot no better than the other local yokels.
It just doesn't show.
To be honest...I know people that paid good money for lessons and after all these years, they shoot no better than the other local yokels.
It just doesn't show.
*Because* people don't practice and implement what they are taught. It's as easy as that.
I can't count the number of times someone has asked me for advice and I have given it to them and... three weeks later I see them and they are doing exactly what they did before. I'm not talking esoteric modifications to their play -- I'm talking very basic things that any decent pool player would point out like a more level cue, a solid bridge, maybe just not raising up as they're stroking.
Part of that is: people will not pay attention to free advice; people will not invest in practice; people (even those who have paid for lessons) will not make the commitment to change.
And sometimes, to be honest, instructors give out bad advice. I have seen instructors tear apart a player's game -- knowing full well these were once a week league players -- and treat them like they were going to go into training 10 hours a day, seven days a week, and completely rebuild their game. That dan't work so good either -- the instructor has to tailor things to the player for a good fit. Not all do that, instead giving out a standard lesson plan to one and all.
And don't get me started on the "instructors" with pivoting, three-angle aiming systems and all kinds of other cockamamy
Lou Figueroa
*Because* people don't practice and implement what they are taught. It's as easy as that.
I can't count the number of times someone has asked me for advice and I have given it to them and... three weeks later I see them and they are doing exactly what they did before. I'm not talking esoteric modifications to their play -- I'm talking very basic things that any decent pool player would point out like a more level cue, a solid bridge, maybe just not raising up as they're stroking.
Part of that is: people will not pay attention to free advice; people will not invest in practice; people (even those who have paid for lessons) will not make the commitment to change.
And sometimes, to be honest, instructors give out bad advice. I have seen instructors tear apart a player's game -- knowing full well these were once a week league players -- and treat them like they were going to go into training 10 hours a day, seven days a week, and completely rebuild their game. That dan't work so good either -- the instructor has to tailor things to the player for a good fit. Not all do that, instead giving out a standard lesson plan to one and all.
And don't get me started on the "instructors" with pivoting, three-angle aiming systems and all kinds of other cockamamy
Lou Figueroa
Which came first, the pool player or the pool instructor?
*Because* people don't practice and implement what they are taught. It's as easy as that.
I can't count the number of times someone has asked me for advice and I have given it to them and... three weeks later I see them and they are doing exactly what they did before. I'm not talking esoteric modifications to their play -- I'm talking very basic things that any decent pool player would point out like a more level cue, a solid bridge, maybe just not raising up as they're stroking.
Part of that is: people will not pay attention to free advice; people will not invest in practice; people (even those who have paid for lessons) will not make the commitment to change.
And sometimes, to be honest, instructors give out bad advice. I have seen instructors tear apart a player's game -- knowing full well these were once a week league players -- and treat them like they were going to go into training 10 hours a day, seven days a week, and completely rebuild their game. That dan't work so good either -- the instructor has to tailor things to the player for a good fit. Not all do that, instead giving out a standard lesson plan to one and all.
And don't get me started on the "instructors" with pivoting, three-angle aiming systems and all kinds of other cockamamy
Lou Figueroa