The key is, every CB/OB position on the table affects our perception of them. If you move either ball, the perception changes. Try this:
Take the two "B" shots from the video. We will only be doing the initial alignment from a standing position. Shot 1, align to B (as described in the DVDs) until it looks perfect. Now freeze and focus your eyes to CCB and where it crosses the OB (drawing a line through CCB to the OB mentally). Now move the balls and do the same thing for the second shot. What you should observe is that even though you aligned things identically from a procedural standpoint, the CCB crosses the OB on an ever slightly different (thinner) alignment. Same procedure, ending in slightly thinner physical alignment. The only thing that differed is the placement of the balls on the table.
You didn't *do* anything different. This is the phenomena of our perception and how we perceive two spheres on a square plane. If you just let your eyes do the work and let your body follow, you'll figure it out. It's all there, but *very* different than conventional ball aiming and thus, not easy to drop old habits to pick up new ones. I didn't get it for a while when I started. It required setting up the shots from DVD1 and shooting them for a couple weeks until it started to click. Once you get it, the pieces fall together quickly and you'll be pocketing balls like a mad man, mad why you didn't discover this years earlier. Then comes the discovery of applying the technique to banks, and all of your pool transgressions will surface![]()
Mohrt, you sure about all that in bold? Stan seems to disagree:
https://youtu.be/EJTJh05FEKw?t=2m39s