I don't know who the guy is so I can't comment for sure on his honesty and trustworthiness. But I am very skeptical about the role of CTE in many of these multi rail bank shots. I think it's highly likely the three railer into the side pocket early on in the video was a one railer to the corner gone long. We have all shot this one by accident many times and had it end up in the far side. I would think the odds of shooting this shot 4 or 5 times in a row successfully are minuscule even for top players with or without an aiming system. I'm not even sure he didn't use a trick ruler, 3.5 inches is almost impenetrably small and the pockets do not appear that small during the shooting video to my lying eyes. All in all what he did and how he presented it on film was not particularly impressive upon careful consideration.
On my video I was playing around with an object ball/cue ball position where a person could pot the ball in all six pockets in a row. As I said it took me many attempts. I'm sure that there are other spots on the table to put the two balls to do this but that was the best one I could find that my skills could complete in a reasonable number of attempts. I enjoy doing challenges like this.
Edit: Whomever it is he has a nice stroke and is obviously a more sound player than I am
So, I reported on this concept many many years ago. What I did was go to Stan with a German friend (who is also a hundred ball runner) who didn't know anything about CTE or objective aiming systems. He was not a member of AZB or any other similar forum and had not discussed aiming with anyone other than me while we were on the way to Stan's. The purpose for bringing him to Stan's was to be a neutral observer. I told him that I would play devil's advocate and challenge Stan on this idea that CTE provides solutions for multiple pockets from a single position. Also I wanted to challenge him in another way and that was to have Andi choose the ball placements and call out the pockets and see whether Stan could use CTE and pocket the ball OR get within the jaws.
We did this for several hours and there was no shot that Andi challenged him on that he did not figure out within a few tries. As a control Andi would try the same shots and have inconsistent results. This experience is the FOUNDATIONAL basis of my willingness to bet on Stan as I have outlined here many times. Since then it has only been strengthened by more experience and the demonstrations of others.
One such demonstration that was not intended to be was at one of the Derby City Classics in the Poolaction.TV action room. Two players were playing a bank match for $100 a rail. They took a break and Tyler Styer got on the table and started shooting bank shots. He was draining multiple rail banks casually. This is not something that just happens. Either you're uncannily able to see those shots or you have some sort of reference frame.
And yes I agree that often a shot that runs short or long will often end up tracking to another pocket. But my experience with Stan was that he could do it on demand consciously and from any position. Of course there were some shots which were simply impossible such a straight back with no possibility to avoid a double kiss. But for all the shots that were possible to make Stan was able to figure out the CTE visual (I like to call is a key) for the shot within 3-4 tries at most. And when he figured it out he then either made the shot or put the cue ball within about half a ball at most. So for me and more importantly for Andi it was clear that there was something there.
The next day after my CTE lesson Andi and I went to a pool room about ten miles away from Stan's house. I got into a bank pool game in Kentucky and won. I was told that my "one pocket" banks were strong. By that they meant banking at pocket speed instead of at a higher speed to avoid inconsistent reactions. Since then I have won about $1800 in various random bank pool games that I have gotten into. But I personally would never presume, even with CTE on my side, that I could beat anyone who was already far above me in their understanding of speed and spin in banking. I played a guy at Derby and lost a couple hundred and he is one of the best in the south. I have no idea whether he uses any objective aiming methods but his results were incredibly consistent and he did bank at higher speeds. He was also not shooting a lot of multi-rail banks but he could run out five one railers fairly easily.
There is "there" there. I can understand the skepticism but I can't understand the unrelenting demeaning and dismissing of our experiences. We are all players and we all understand our own efforts and results. Not a single one us at your and my speed has not spent time at the table shooting three and four railers trying to improve our results. We have all spent time playing with bank shots. So we KNOW immediately when someone is able to do things more consistently than we can. We also KNOW immediately when we have learned something that provides us with a higher level of consistency.
With CTE I can make the sickest shots more consistently. Even with all the other variables being the same, shitty stance, wonky stroke, unstable mental condition......I can make shots more consistently. And not just any shots, stupid cuts and crazy banks. And by more consistently I don't mean every time or 9/10 up from 5/10 or even five out of ten. I mean that a sick shot that might have been 1/20 for me previously becomes 2/3 out of 20. Still low percentage but higher than before learning CTE. And the added benefit for me is that I have more shots that I feel confident in taking.
When I first met Hal he said to me that I should set up a shot I have trouble with. I knew exactly which shot because I had one that I could get decent results when I set it up and practiced it by rote. In fact my friend (and better player) Chris McDaniel and I had just practiced this shot a few days prior to meeting Hal and we shot reps of ten and recorded the results. Then in a money game I dogged it again. So I was 100% clear which shot I wanted to try. After about less than five minutes of getting over my brain screaming that I was NOT lined up right I started to perceive (or aim/align) the way that Hal was telling me to line up. I split the pocket in a way that I honestly - swear on my kid's lives - never had hit so cleanly. I stood up and said WTF!!! Bob Johnson, my friend who had called me down to meet Hal, just smiled at me. I did it again, and again, and again. I said HOW ON EARTH does this possibly work.
You said in response to Niels' video "Refreshing video of solid truth". The implication, in context, is that Stan, myself, Tyler, and many others are not telling the truth and what is demonstrated is somehow a trick deliberately crafted to fool the viewer. This is not fair and goes beyond skepticism. Clearly I don't want to directly contradict Niels Feijen but I must point out that he is a student of Bert Kinister. Bert is a HUGE proponent of rote practice and drills and has contributed significantly to pool in positive ways through his extensive library of drills and pattern play practice.
In one of Bert's videos he describes a visual trick to make the type of shots Niels was demonstrating. Bert said line up as if you were going to shoot it straight into the rail and your mind would adjust to the right line. I tried this and it works. Not ghost ball. Just a mind-trick that Bert discovered and shared that has some value. Rodney Morris several years ago commented that after learning a little CTE from Stevie Moore that he was making balls better than ever and had beaten the 13 ball rotation ghost. Then Rodney made an instructional video and on the subject of aiming he went back to ghost ball. Ghost ball is the standard go to for these types of instructional videos for many professionals even if that's not what they actually use. I had the fortune to spend a good amount of time with Rodney and asked him about aiming and whether he used any sort of method that wasn't in the books. He told me that Hawaiian Brian had taught him a method of aiming at the quarters of the object ball instead of looking for a contact point.
Shane Van Boening in his TAR instructional video and in a TAR interview where he was taking questions and answering them on the table said that he uses his shaft to aim with. He said he discovered it on his own and he demonstrated it. So when Niels says there is no magic pill and that Ghost Ball is all that is needed and you say "refreshing solid truth" I have to ask if you consider Shane to be a liar on the subject of aiming?
When Tyler Styer says he uses CTE aiming and demonstrates world class proficiency do you consider him to be a liar? When Darren Appleton said that he endorses the SEE system and was using something similar before Ekkes presented the SEE system to him do you consider Darren to be a liar?
Continued next post.