CTE and TOI

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Well there we go, no need to do my experiment you are already using John's comments as validation of your position.

I sincerely hope that John gets together with Stan someday. I am sure that after some time with him he will revise these comments and boy won't that be depressing for you to have to relegate John to the ignorant bum category.

Since this is pure speculation, it's is meaningless.

I can speculate that he won't change his mind and will stand by his statement, now how depressing will that be for the system guys.

Speculation works both ways.

Weasel words, speculation, meaningless bets, personal attacks seem to be the way of system users whenever challenged about the real value long term.

Like I said before, people that don't stick with ghost ball aren't trying hard enough and really don't want to improve their game with the purest form of aiming there is.
 
Since this is pure speculation, it's is meaningless.

I can speculate that he won't change his mind and will stand by his statement, now how depressing will that be for the system guys.

Speculation works both ways.

Weasel words, speculation, meaningless bets, personal attacks seem to be the way of system users whenever challenged about the real value long term.

Like I said before, people that don't stick with ghost ball aren't trying hard enough and really don't want to improve their game with the purest form of aiming there is.

Purest doesn't mean best.

Please come to Colorado.
 
Well there we go, no need to do my experiment you are already using John's comments as validation of your position.

I sincerely hope that John gets together with Stan someday. I am sure that after some time with him he will revise these comments and boy won't that be depressing for you to have to relegate John to the ignorant bum category.

I would really enjoy working with John should he ever decide to check this CTE stuff out. He is a great candidate for looking at CTE PRO ONE and sharing back with TAR or AZ in some way his thoughts about his experience.

Stan Shuffett
 
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Since this is pure speculation, it's is meaningless.

I can speculate that he won't change his mind and will stand by his statement, now how depressing will that be for the system guys.

Speculation works both ways.

Weasel words, speculation, meaningless bets, personal attacks seem to be the way of system users whenever challenged about the real value long term.

Like I said before, people that don't stick with ghost ball aren't trying hard enough and really don't want to improve their game with the purest form of aiming there is.



How about you do up a video of your ghost ball system.;)


You must not be doing something rite MR duck because the aiming line is not always a straight shot line.:wink:to your ghost.
Aiming isnt about a ghost at all not in the real game.Shape teaches you the real way to aim.Wouldnt you agree? Some shots you may go into a few different ways and then there's some ,well just one way.
 
Since this is pure speculation, it's is meaningless.

I can speculate that he won't change his mind and will stand by his statement, now how depressing will that be for the system guys.

Speculation works both ways.

Weasel words, speculation, meaningless bets, personal attacks seem to be the way of system users whenever challenged about the real value long term.

Like I said before, people that don't stick with ghost ball aren't trying hard enough and really don't want to improve their game with the purest form of aiming there is.

Gee, Duckie, the only thing you left out in your post that attacked systems users was the bet part. Why say something to try and denigrate system users when you are doing the exact same thing in your post that you are complaining about?
 
"Plenty"? If we're still talking strictly short-rack rotation players (and not guys that practice or have very good familiarity with straight pool), sorry John, but no, I would challenge that. A few, or a handful? Sure.

Well the point is rather pedantic I think because the subforum is about aiming and the execution that follows it. So using the only video evidence available of Lou's playing it's fair that his ability is up for scrutiny. Whether or not most, a few or anyone here other than you and Lou can run more than 30 balls is not the point really. The point is that Lou is on video missing shots that SHOULD be unmissable for a player of his implied caliber.


:p Actually, that was to address your "multiple swings at the plate" thing, which you reiterated above. I wanted to be clear we were talking about the same thing.

We are now.



Thank you for proving my point. You have entirely too much respect for that "running the balls in rotation" thing. And, those 27-45 balls are NOT being run continuously -- there's 3/4/5 "mind-resetting" break shots in there, remember? They are not truly stringing those 27-45 shots together.

Mind resetting is your term. If you truly want to go there then we can. Because I just fail to see why shooting x-number of balls in rotation where you ONLY have one ball that you are allowed to shoot each time is less of a feat than shooting x-number of balls at random where with few exceptions you have multiple options. I have respect for all disciplines and respect for all the players of skill. I don't consider 14.1 players to be of higher skill than 9-ball players or vice versa.

Sure the patterns need to be learned but other than that it's making balls in the hole.

Although I will give you that the player that CAN string 3 - 5 packs of 9-ball consistently (and we're talking 9-foot table, of course, not barboxes) probably *do* have the shooting prowess to hack their way through a 30-ball straight pool run.

Or possibly more, Johnny Archer one week after learning to play straight pool beat his teacher Nick Varner with a 150 and out which he continued on to extend to 199 if I remember correctly. And this was in the finals of a major pro event which is to say that Johnny beat someone with extensive 14.1 knowledge after only a week of practice.
Oh, come on. You mean to tell me that even you yourself can't tell one player's creed from another? That you can't tell when someone's "cue ball heroics" (racing around the table to get from shot to shot, versus picking the pattern apart correctly) is not one leaning on their base 9-ball skillset?

You mean to tell me that you can't tell a 14.1 player, from a one pocket player, from a 9-ball player, etc. -- just by watching how they play?

But to answer your question, yes, yes we have interviewed players afterwards, and the suspicions were correct in almost every case.

You mean like Lou Butera running 150 and out in 21 minutes? That sort of racing around the table?

That's very true -- pressure gets to us all. But in these pressure situations, we all resort to our "base" or "founding" skillset. And that's my point -- one's "9-ball-ness" comes out in these pressure situations.

See example of Johnny Archer beating Nick Varner above.

Why don't you spend some time with us in the 14.1 challenge booth, and watch? You'll see what I'm talking about, and then we can interview players afterwards, and verify.

If I had time to hang out and enjoy these shows I would. But to be honest if I did have that sort of time I wouldn't want to waste it proving or disproving a point that is ultimately meaningless.

Can't argue that. I got nuthin'. :)

Well, I have the video proof that I suck part down pat. I just need to get the "actually can play" part down when gambling.



This is common sense. But not all things can be boiled down so simply. Yes, it's true; if you miss, your run is over, you sit, and you lose. But it's also true that you make the ball, you forget that you were supposed to break up that cluster a foot away, and now you lost your window to do so, where that cluster bites you in the *ss later, ending your run, you sit, and you lose. See?

Yes of course but we are talking about Lou here, the great Lou F. who should already know these things and be able to handle them with ease, experienced player that he is.



<...facepalm...> Remember the purpose of my original reply? That before people lambaste, they should know what they're looking at, that not everything is as it looks or seems?

Again you assume that those commenting don't know what they are looking at. A pretty bold assumption in my book. And EVEN IF they didn't know there is an announcer on the video TELLING them what they are looking at.

<...Sean reminds himself he's in the Aiming subforum...> But of course, if we're going to emotionally-charge aiming systems, let's make sure we adopt the stance that *any* miss is sacrilege, right?

Apparently it works that way for Lou. Any person who says that they don't get it is "proof" that the system doesn't work. Any pro who doesn't like systems is "smart" and any pro who does is a no accomplishment bum.



Now we're talking!

And if I do this will prove what exactly? That I can run 30+ balls? Will I now be someone whose comments mean something?

Right, and conveniently forget that there's more to staying at the table than "don't miss" (which was Willie's trademarked sarcasm, btw -- but obviously, the readership devotees here in this particular forum miss the sarcasm and instead take it as "gospel"). You are just as likely to have to sit and lose with not doing your other duties at the table (e.g. breaking up clusters), as you are with a miss.

Trademarked sarcasm? Where do you find that this is the case? Please quote your source. But even if it were the point is still valid, don't miss. When you fail to break up a cluster you still have the option to play safe so you don't automatically lose. Oh, gee was that 14.1 knowledge....where did that come from?

Here is a video where Willie Mosconi plays Jimmy Caras and in one segment they are playing safe with a cluster on the table that one or both them attempted and failed to break out.

However in a break and run contest then there is no safe option and thus the criteria is 100% make the shot you are shooting AND break out clusters. Sorry but again no bonus points for what you were trying to do if you miss the shot.


"Whether or not" is also too simplistic. You need *both*. You are just as likely to have your run ended, sit, and lose, with not doing that secondary duty, as you are with a miss. Granted, the miss guarantees that position, while you might get lucky in achieving the secondary task in a subsequent shot if you didn't miss. Or not! It really depends on how many balls are left on the table -- you already know this, but the more there are, the more opportunities you have to achieve those secondary goals. But the less balls on the table, the less chances you have -- so back to the original point, you need to achieve those secondary goals as early as possible, thereby tying the primary and secondary goals back together again in each shot. A pool "shot" is a complete system all by itself. You can't deconstruct it or boil it down like you are, without losing the whole premise behind the shot's purpose of keeping you at the table.

I can absolutely boil it down to missing the shot. Miss the shot the inning is over. Make the shot and don't break out the cluster then at least you are still at the table and have a chance to make something else happen. It's really that simple.


You missed the little jab. Nobody seems to take you up on these gaff bets (I've yet to see one accepted and executed to resolution), so I thought it was monopoly money you were betting. ;)

Why don't you give me an example of a bet that I have proposed that you consider to be a gaff? The reason people don't take me up on the serious ones is that they know they will lose. People don't want to put their money where their mouth is when it comes time to bet. They want to flap their gums and insult others and say that people are frauds and that their work is snake-oil but when it comes time to man-up and bet on those words their nuts shrivel into raisins.

Anyway, let's get something straight -- we *all* use aiming systems. You do, I do, everyone does. If you have a technique or methodology for getting yourself online and set into a shot, ready to fire, you are using an aiming system. I myself have a set number of steps I get into before I'm ready to pull the trigger. That, to me, is a SYSTEM for aiming.

Lou doesn't. Pat doesn't. Lou says that the set up takes care of aiming which is false. Pat says he aims by pure feel which is probably true given how much he fidgets on each shot.

I just think the passion, religion, and especially the vitriol over the topic of "aiming systems" is just entirely overboard. We're getting so wound up over this stuff?

That's your perogative, no one is making you post in this section. Their is no religion. It's simply that some people take these methods and try them and find that they work exceedingly well and others don't accept those many testimonials, don't accept professionals who say they also use aiming systems and they parlay that nonacceptance into insults and slander.

Doesn't make sense. (And that goes for BOTH sides, btw -- those that attack, and those that defend.)

It makes perfect sense to me. EGO. Those that don't like aiming systems who have been so rabidly against them have a lot of their ego invested into them. And those who do use them and those who teach them have a lot of TIME invested into them. So these two sides will clash.

What happens when you remove one side though? Productive dialog happens, which was supposed to be the point of this sub-forum. THe subforum that the opponents said would die from lack of interest if not in the main forum. But it did not die and productive dialog happened.

And that just cannot stand for the guys like Lou. No one shall be allowed to happily pursue a study of aiming systems while he can interject negativity and slander turning positives into negatives along the way.

What would this thread have been WITHOUT Lou's posts. Erase those posts and the posts that have been written in response and you are left with a positive discussion of the CTE/ProOne method which IS the purpose of this sub-forum.

To put this into context, maybe if I were to go into the 14.1 forum and interject biting comments about how 9 ball is the better game into each thread you would understand my point. (I don't consider 9B to be better, it's hypothetical).
 
Since this is pure speculation, it's is meaningless.

I can speculate that he won't change his mind and will stand by his statement, now how depressing will that be for the system guys.

Speculation works both ways.

Weasel words, speculation, meaningless bets, personal attacks seem to be the way of system users whenever challenged about the real value long term.

Like I said before, people that don't stick with ghost ball aren't trying hard enough and really don't want to improve their game with the purest form of aiming there is.

If John doesn't change his mind then the status quo remains the same. But the system guys know something that John does not, technique matters. Tiger Woods doesn't go to a different coach because that coach will "make his hands bleed more" than his previous coach. He goes to a different coach to get a different perspective on his technique.

How can you say that GB is the purest form of aiming that there is when you haven't even tried other ways? Even Willie Mosconi, the guy who was way better than your guru Arthur Cranfield, put a non-ghostball aiming method into one of his instructional books. Are you going to pull a Lou and also say that Willie Mosconi was wrong?

Challenged about the real value long term? In what way have you EVER done that?

I have listed the long term benefits dozens of times. When you answer which is RARELY you simply dismiss those points. As I have told you also dozens of times Greg I can do every method you know but you cannot do it the ways I know. There is no shot and not way to shoot any shot that you know that I do not know. None at all.

The difference though between you and I is that I don't need any silly Ghostball trainer to tell me where to aim. I can shoot shots that I have never before practiced and have a better than 50% chance to make the ball because I have an aiming system that does not rely on imagining a phantom ball and I don't have to have practiced the shot a hundred times using a piece of paper to tell me where to aim.

So, you're right, those that don't want to spend more time with GB aren't trying hard enough, they don't want to have to set up little templates all over the table in order to practice. They would like a way to aim that is the same in practice as it is in competition.

Is that such a bad thing?
 
Thanks again, Sean.

Honestly, I don't recall knocking anyone. Obviously guys like "Blade" are great players. To clarify my point: I believe everyone -- from pros to beginners -- should be welcome to the discussion and their opinions accorded respect because *everyone* has something to contribute. In addition, some of us find the perspectives of non-pros, but nonetheless fine players such as yourself, more insightful and meaningful to fellow amateurs than the occasional perspective offered from far more advanced players.

We all come from such divergent backgrounds and have such a wealth of skills that very often the bestest stuff comes from "the mouths of babes" so to speak. Unfortunately there are those that want to muzzle opinions or disregard and disrespect them because they aren't top players.

That would be a shame and everyone's loss.

Lou Figueroa

Not true. No one is saying that you or anyone else can't have something valuable to say. But when you are the one arguing with and disrespecting the pro-players you are doing your part to INSURE that we ONLY have the amateur perspective. Which would be fine with you as you may think of yourself as big fish in a small pond.
 
Funny, I was going to post the same thing this morning. Mr. Thin Skin with his monkey and sycophant followers has everyone on ignore who he can't bully.

Mr. Thin Skin got kicked out of every pool room in his area for being a pompous know it all. "I play around the country in major events so I KNOW this table needs to be recovered, re-leveled or plays bad."

It's ironic how he has a history of bullying pros to the point where they leave. When people bully him back in HOPES he'll leave, they go on ignore. Maybe he thinks if he gets enough people who can actually play to leave, that'll make him the best player here?

To Mr. Thin Skin, every pro player is a mongoloid with "retard-strength" who has no clue how or why they play well. The moment a pro comes here to help, it's only a matter of time before he pounces and "out-types" the pro before he forces them out. He prob loves it since he can't beat them playing pool and probably considers that a W.

Mr. Thin Skin is a total pussy. Can't stand to read the truth from those who aren't afraid of internet chest-puffing so he puts those on ignore and :-) and ;-) everyone else to death while shitting on pros because they haven't sat in RSB/AZB for 15 years practicing their posting style since they were out playing pool and winning money -- imagine that.

Mr. Thin Skin is a seasoned PR professional who can't stand the heat of azb so the heat goes on ignore. For those who are left, he runs into a phone booth and emerges as Captain Thick Skin.

The great thing about being on someone's ignore list is that you can comment on what they write and they can't respond. It's like they are handicapping themselves. I think it's great because then I don't have endure the little biting insults that Lou puts out and be distracted by them.

The only downside is that I don't think I will ever get my chance to spot him a ball 9/8 for $100 a game. Which is just as well since I have a built-in excuse for losing in that he is a pro-class amateur going up against a part-time B-player. But if I should win, imagine the humiliation. It would be almost as bad as Duckie beating anyone on AZB. :-)
 
I recommend EVERYONE to watch the video above!
No matter if you use ghost ball CTE or the SEE system you have to keep your head/ vision center on your aiming line!!!
Most intermediate players have problems with this task!!!
 
I'm surprised I never noticed

Not true. No one is saying that you or anyone else can't have something valuable to say. But when you are the one arguing with and disrespecting the pro-players you are doing your part to INSURE that we ONLY have the amateur perspective. Which would be fine with you as you may think of yourself as big fish in a small pond.

Lou disrespects pro players? I'm surprised I never noticed. ;)
 
I recommend EVERYONE to watch the video above!
No matter if you use ghost ball CTE or the SEE system you have to keep your head/ vision center on your aiming line!!!
Most intermediate players have problems with this task!!!

Concerning CTE, one of its most basic principles is that the eyes are OFFSET to the actual shot line during ball address. The purpose of CTE is to take one's eyes to the shot line for each of the one zillion possibilities.

If one knew the shot such as an objective center to center zero angle shot and that were the case for all shots then perhaps CTE would not exist.

Oh well, I can assure you that beyond any doubt, Hal Houle NEVER entertained the idea of beginning one's ball address for CTE with the eyes on a perceived shot line.

Stan Shuffett
 
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Concerning CTE, one of its most basic principles is that the eyes are OFFSET to the actual shot line diring ball address. The purpose of CTE is to take one's eyes to the shot line for the zillion possibilities.

If one knew the shot such as an objective center to center zero angle shot and that were the case all shots then perhaps CTE would not exist

Oh well, I can assure you that beyond any doubt, Hal Houle NEVER intertained the idea of beginning one's ball address for CTE with the eyes on a perceived shot line.

Stan Shuffett

Stan this is very true and perhaps I should have made a clarification when I reposted the link to the video. I wasn't suggesting that the eyes always start on the perceived shot line in a ghost ball type aiming as the video suggests. I was more commenting on the analysis of the body movement into the shooting position.

For CTE this is also relevant because in my opinion it is important to be able to identify and "see" the CTE line in order to properly start the body mechanics.

As you mention the problem that CTE does solve is the fact that the shot line from the cue ball to the object ball is not always easy to see. With a center to center straight in shot in the video it's clear. But with angles and distance it becomes less clear. However what is always there is the CTE line. To me this is so important for the alignment and positioning the body for the rest of the steps.

The advice given on weight shifting and falling forward into position is very good in my opinion. I feel that this type of body consciousness is a great compliment to CTE.
 
Especially on long shots

Finding the line of the shot, aligning your head with it, and dropping in on that line seems a lot more consistant than pivoting into the line from visuals that start off line.

I said it in the other thread, any slight variance on where your bridge lands will change the line of aim when you find center cue ball.
 
Finding the line of the shot, aligning your head with it, and dropping in on that line seems a lot more consistant than pivoting into the line from visuals that start off line.

I said it in the other thread, any slight variance on where your bridge lands will change the line of aim when you find center cue ball.

The whole point of CTE PRO ONE is that one's visual offset is the same for every shot, short distances or long distances...and when combined with a rotation to CCB there is a connection to the geometry of a table. That visual offset can always be described as a 1/2 tip manual pivot or a visual sweep equal to the 1/2 tip pivot.


Stan Shuffett
 
Finding the line of the shot, aligning your head with it, and dropping in on that line seems a lot more consistant than pivoting into the line from visuals that start off line.

I said it in the other thread, any slight variance on where your bridge lands will change the line of aim when you find center cue ball.

I don't know if you have tried CTE or if you use it but unless you have direct proof of what "will" happen you shouldn't make statements of fact like this.

Those of us who use CTE KNOW that for all shots, long, short, funny angles, cueball on the rail, shooting over balls, thin cuts, long thin cuts, middle of the table reverse angle shots, etc... CTE is the NUTS.

There simply is not a single shot that CTE does not work for. I have made so many GREAT shots in game situations because of having CTE as my method of aim that I have stopped counting them. Game winning, set winning, MONEY winning shots under pressure.

So making blanket statements that using CTE will do this or that when you don't actually use it and have no proof isn't helping. I mean if you an to undertake a study of CTE and show us all what you mean then by all means do so. I am always interested in watching people's experiments. For now though what you are saying does not in fact match the real world experience of myself and many others.

But let me ask you this, how do you find the line of the shot?

Because basically that is that this is all about. If the line of shot were easy to find then we wouldn't need so many ghostball training aids nor would anyone bother with developing different methods to aim.
 
Finding the line of the shot, aligning your head with it, and dropping in on that line seems a lot more consistant than pivoting into the line from visuals that start off line.

I said it in the other thread, any slight variance on where your bridge lands will change the line of aim when you find center cue ball.


I think many years ago in one of his BD articles Bob put some numbers on the issue of bridge hand placement. I don't recall the break down but basically the point was that you must be extremely precise in your bridge hand placement.

Lou Figueroa
 
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