Originally Posted by sjm
I grew up on this type of nine ball and was glad when it disappeared. It was more of a shot maker's game back then, and to some, shooting pool well and shotmaking are one fo the same. For such people, I can understand why they miss it.
However, Texas Express brought many new skills into the game. More defense, more kicking, more jump shots, more two-way and other multi-purpose shots allows Texas Express players to show far more creativity than their counterparts of thirty years ago. Texas express has much greater variety, requires more finesse, more billiard knowledge and better defense than two shot shootout. And, for all those who lament that Texas Express has a luck element, let's not overlook that Texas Express penalizes a player far more than two shot shootout when they make a position play error. Being allowed to push out when you miss shape is, to me, very "lucky" indeed.
A return to two shot shootout would be very disappointing for this fan. May that version of nine ball rest in peace.
I grew up on this type of nine ball and was glad when it disappeared. It was more of a shot maker's game back then, and to some, shooting pool well and shotmaking are one fo the same. For such people, I can understand why they miss it.
However, Texas Express brought many new skills into the game. More defense, more kicking, more jump shots, more two-way and other multi-purpose shots allows Texas Express players to show far more creativity than their counterparts of thirty years ago. Texas express has much greater variety, requires more finesse, more billiard knowledge and better defense than two shot shootout. And, for all those who lament that Texas Express has a luck element, let's not overlook that Texas Express penalizes a player far more than two shot shootout when they make a position play error. Being allowed to push out when you miss shape is, to me, very "lucky" indeed.
A return to two shot shootout would be very disappointing for this fan. May that version of nine ball rest in peace.