Enough with the ball pocketing system from another dimension that was never suppose to be. I will sell you this guy's secrets if you really want to know how to pocket balls.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gMw7zsRet4&feature=youtube_gdata_player
What are you talking about?
You have zero clue what's happening here and yet you can't help but to put it down. I am at the home of a wonderful human being enjoying the hospitality of his lovely family and enjoying the fascination with pool that all lovers of pool share.
Regardless of whether you agree with what Stan teaches or not you could have the manners to stay out it. Now, as for the actual lessons and what Stan teaches, seeing is believing. You are more than welcome to disprove CTE and Stan's Pro One.
I assume you have a pool table and access to a video camera. Stan has many videos up on YouTube covering pocketing and banking balls.
Here is one of them.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A14srrn2uEg
Why don't you set up the same shot and shoot it in all the pockets the way Stan does? Then you can explain to all of us what the "trick" is. Should be easy for you right?
If you were here then you could see and experience for yourself that there is no illusion here. It's simply learning how to use a set of keys that unlocks virtually every shot on the table. Today I spent hours shooting shots on the ten footer and the method Stan taught me held up on the ten foot table just as well as the nine foot table.
Later Andi and I went to the local pool room, Rack and Cue and I played some Kentucky Bank Pool and using CTE I held my own making some very nice banks - VERY NICE BANKS - that frankly would have been near impossible for me previously if I had tried them just by pure feel.
I actually feel sad for folks like you who think that this is just some sort of hocus pocus. I am about to play a match against a guy for $10,000 because he decided to bully me with this very attitude 12 years ago. I am going to rob him on camera in front of 2000 people on the net and a live audience. How am I going to rob him? Simply because I have the key to making shots now, an extremely accurate key. A key created by Hal Houle and further refined by Stan Shuffett that adds hundreds of more shots to my arsenal that I can now consistently make.
Does this require practice? Of course it does. Does it require a disciplined approach? Of course it does. My muscles ache right now from the new body positions I have to adopt to end up on the correct line. But the reward is the sweet sound of the ball hitting the back of the pocket and the sweet lie of the ball on banking where if it doesn't go it lays right in the small half diamond square which is what all one pocket players want. For one pocket especially Stan's methods are the nuts.
So again please fire up your video camera and duplicate Stan's videos and show us all how it's done.
My friend Andi is a very good player from Germany. Yesterday he tried some shot under the curtain with poor results. Out of twenty shots he might have made one and hung one and the rest were no where near the pocket. Stan shot them in easily, direct to the pocket and one and two rail banks. Today after I got Andi a lesson of his own he was splitting the pocket under the curtain.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJTJh05FEKw
This method is the most objective ball-to-ball method I have ever seen or used. It's truly unlocking just about any shot. I challenged myself on the ten footer to find shots where there is no CTE aim and frankly there are almost none that come up frequently.
And lastly Satori, this is not all that Stan teaches. He is a thoroughly qualified instructor who can take the student through the mechanics with the ability to correct stroke errors and stance positions. He also can teach high level strategy in all games. If I were a professional player and the money were there in pro pool to support having a full time coach then Stan would be on my very short list of people I would want to be a full time coach. But if the money were there then it's a surety Stan would be pursuing a professional career of his own.