I've noticed that quite a few posts here mention kicking or banking systems. Sharivari's latest video is actually about a banking system. I think it's funny that there are players who appreciate and see the logical benefits of good kicking and banking systems, but that same logic isn't applied to good aiming systems.
Kicking and banking systems are used often because we typically don't shoot kicks or banks enough to develop a good eye for those shots. They simply don't come up often enough to use that good ol trial and error method of learning. Sure, for those of who've played consistently for years, we have a pretty good knowledge of most kicks and banks, and the systems are only used occassionally. But for players with less experience, those systems are used quite often, or at least they should be used often, because they help program the mind for what would otherwise require a lot more table time.
Practicing and using a good system trains your mind quicker than strictly relying on trial and error methods of learning. And this applies to learning how to aim cut shots just as well as it does to learning kicks and banks.
Kicking and banking systems are used often because we typically don't shoot kicks or banks enough to develop a good eye for those shots. They simply don't come up often enough to use that good ol trial and error method of learning. Sure, for those of who've played consistently for years, we have a pretty good knowledge of most kicks and banks, and the systems are only used occassionally. But for players with less experience, those systems are used quite often, or at least they should be used often, because they help program the mind for what would otherwise require a lot more table time.
Practicing and using a good system trains your mind quicker than strictly relying on trial and error methods of learning. And this applies to learning how to aim cut shots just as well as it does to learning kicks and banks.