I enjoy trying new thingsThen why do you fart about with aiming systems? Every Brit knows hitting the cue ball sweetly is 99% of the battle, and by far the hardest thing to do.

I enjoy trying new thingsThen why do you fart about with aiming systems? Every Brit knows hitting the cue ball sweetly is 99% of the battle, and by far the hardest thing to do.
I guess you are referring to rotation when you say pool. Snooker and rotation are miles apart, try comparing 14.1 or straight pool to snooker and both are played in a small section of the table. Difference being, that small area is larger on a snooker table ;-)I have watched a lot of snooker and of course pool. Thousands of hours my friend. And I do know the difference between 9ft and 12ft. What I said is not that snooker pros don't play these shots. I said that there are no more than 5 of them who can play them with accuracy. And they do play most of the game in a very small area. In pool you have to play the whole table all the time.
So you think there is some kind of secret, eh? I can assure you there isn't. The secret, if you can call it that is having the ability to strike the CB where you intend. The grip, getting back on topic has very little to do with that. The rest is upto the player. Plenty of people can hit the CB where they want, but can't see the shot line, judge how the CB will react, work positional angles out and have the speed control necessary to reach the top. There is no secret in gaining these attribute, just natural ability and practice.
If you have the mindset that you just don't know the "secrets" to improve, then you will be looking all your life for them, and never improving at all.
Pidge and mark187187 , i will tell you a little secret! i implemented a change in my game two days ago, and last night, my pocketing accuracy jumped 10 folds; none of what i implements has been mentioned anywhere on AZB or Google, seriously. My pool friends yesterday asked, did you take weed before i went to pool hall, that good! i did miss few shots though and i know why!
Also, i shot the best snooker practice ever, i am documenting all and i will hope one day to learn accurate pattern play, of which what requires lots of practice..No i will not tell what i did!
I enjoy trying new thingsI also like to see what all the fuss is about, and as of yet haven't found one that matches up to relying on experience. And many in fact work because you adjust based on previous experience.
Its swings and round about. Some people can hit a little ball very straight but can't see the shot line for the life in them, so an aiming system would help them out. Others can't hit little ball straight, but can see the shot line crystal clear, so working in cueing...and holding a piece of wood, would benefit them more.But they pale into insignificance when compared to cueing. I don't think good players should give them the oxygen of publicity. I feel its Holocaust-denial terroritory.
Dribbling on about only one way to hold a piece of wood is on the same plain.
Then why do you fart about with aiming systems? Every Brit knows hitting the cue ball sweetly is 99% of the battle, and by far the hardest thing to do.
So you are on here asking questions that you expect answers to, but are not willing to share with the forum something that may be of help to someone else?
I hope you realize how this comes across?
Hey, Thaiger.....we agree on something!
Accuracy starts at the cue-ball
I can only suppose that you were doing something very wrong for your game to improve so drastically in 2 days- were you playing with the wrong end of the cue?
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Obviously no good player has struggled with aiming...hence why they're good. But for your average club player, or a youngster starting out aiming system could be a way to get them to the line of the shot and eventually they will have hit so many balls with their system that they start seeing the shot line.And ends.
Disagree with pidge - there's not a good player in history that has struggled with aiming on any level. Cannot aim, cannot play: not now, not ever. Hit the CB good and you WILL hit the OB good.
If you've been playing so long, and havent had the success in snooker then you are either being intimidated by the size and difference in tables and snatching at shots....which many do when they move to a larger table or you never had a stroke in the first place.The truth is i have been trying for last 37 years to pocket balls, do superb at pool some times, some times not so great, but suck miserably at snooker (even easy fff shots) on and off more often, my mission for last few years is to find why! i would find something, go to play money game it fails, back to drawing board, done this many times, i feel this time is the real deal--- i hope! Will see, it is only a game after all, but killing and exhausting my ffff curiosity!
If you've been playing so long, and havent had the success in snooker then you are either being intimidated by the size and difference in tables and snatching at shots....which many do when they move to a larger table or you never had a stroke in the first place.
I'd guess that if you played snooker for 37 years you'd be more consistent. There's no mystery here- 37 years playing pool, 3 years playing snooker. That's why you're better at pool.
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Here are my thoughts on grip, what I use and have used etc...
There can be a great variety of grips that work equally well. The key to success IMO is letting the weight of the cue do the work.
Once you start trying to force the cue through the ball, you can introduce all sorts of bad things that become difficult to isolate and correct.
I invented a device I call "The Perfect Grip". It isn't available on the market yet though (if it even will be) I had shown it to a few players, Max Eberle was interested in the concept when I first showed him.
I was still toying with whether to do them custom for each player or a generic or making both available.
It has since gone on the back burner with all of the other projects I've been working on.
Basically what it is is a form fitted device to a person's hand (thumb and first two fingers, although it can be made to the person's whole grip hand if desired) that is slightly larger than a cue with foam inserts on the inside.
It can close fully around the cue and the foam grips the cue but allows some movement even when gripped tightly.
This way a player can use a firm grip but the weight of the cue still does the work.
The prototype that I had been playing with was lost or stolen and I haven't had the time to make another one for now.
Anyways, the grip that I currently use is that I point my thumb straight down and and grip it between my first and middle finger.
This creates a "V" or triangle where the three digits come together and I let the cue rest in this crook.
by gripping my thumb with my first and middle finger it allows me to feel the tightness of the grip without squeezing and forcing the cue through the ball.
Again, I don't think it matters what grip you use as long as you don't try to force the cue through the CB and you let the weight of the cue do the work.
Jaden
8 pages now and nobody has acknowledged that you need a different grip for different shots.
I would write what I know, except that I learned it from Freddy the Beards videos and it wouldn't be right for me to give knowledge that he was selling for a reasonable price away.
Perhaps this is because you don't need a different grip for different shots.8 pages now and nobody has acknowledged that you need a different grip for different shots.
I would write what I know, except that I learned it from Freddy the Beards videos and it wouldn't be right for me to give knowledge that he was selling for a reasonable price away.
I'll be the first.Perhaps this is because you don't need a different grip for different shots.8 pages now and nobody has acknowledged that you need a different grip for different shots.