What shots have you been practicing?

Jayson Shaw was the only person to call out Shane and his racking methods.

The ability to spot other cheaters is a rare and exquisite skill.

Why would newly installed competition WPA sanctioned tables need a template rack in the first place?

Brand new equipment should have no problem with hand set tight racks.
 
Jayson Shaw was the only person to call out Shane and his racking methods.

The ability to spot other cheaters is a rare and exquisite skill.
What the hell...

You are a troll right? Like you are just on here fucking with us all. Either that, or you are 13... or you have some type of mental disability.

You quoted me but I said nothing at all about cheating...
 
Jayson Shaw was the only person to call out Shane and his racking methods.

The ability to spot other cheaters is a rare and exquisite skill.
The post you replied to has nothing about Shaw or Van Boening. You said this thread was about practice shots, but now you're throwing in comments to provoke discussion and antagonize people.

I think you have a short attention span. When the responses to your post suggest you don't know what you're talking about, you make a 90 degree turn and thrown something else in.

Focus! Pay attention! These also apply to playing pool.
 
What the hell...

You are a troll right? Like you are just on here fucking with us all. Either that, or you are 13... or you have some type of mental disability.

You quoted me but I said nothing at all about cheating...
Don't worry, a troll with the intelligence of a 13-year-old won't last long.

pj
chgo
 
the problem with going from beginner to intermediate is finding the corrections to make.
I disagree: Going from beginner to intermediate is a;most all about fundamentals and almost nothing about corrections (unless you mean corrections to your currently lousy fundamentals.)
most athletes call it the wall because they cant correct their flaws.
Most athletes don't pay enough attention to "what they did" so they can correlate it back to "what happened."
Those that do pay enough attention, make the correlation and end up "getting it".
 
I disagree: Going from beginner to intermediate is a;most all about fundamentals and almost nothing about corrections (unless you mean corrections to your currently lousy fundamentals.)

Most athletes don't pay enough attention to "what they did" so they can correlate it back to "what happened."
Those that do pay enough attention, make the correlation and end up "getting it".
Hope you are doing well sir!
 
Taking a common-sense definition of beginner / intermediate / advanced, I'd say very few players who stick with the game a couple of years fail to make intermediate-level.
Almost by definition, intermediate is most players with any experience.

So the big jump is intermediate to advanced.
And again, the definition of advanced is shaped to be a fairly small proportion of players. (If most players were advanced, advanced would mean average.)

So for players who want to improve, the question is how to go from intermediate to advanced. (Then later, maybe you can think about advanced to pro.)

I think you can get to advanced with correct fundamentals and practice time, and you'll struggle to get to advanced if either is lacking (although naturally talented poolhall bums with bad fundamentals do manage it with just time).
 
Jayson Shaw was the only person to call out Shane and his racking methods.

The ability to spot other cheaters is a rare and exquisite skill.
Incorrect, on both.
Screenshot_20210714-094816__01.jpg
 
Why would newly installed competition WPA sanctioned tables need a template rack in the first place?

Brand new equipment should have no problem with hand set tight racks.
Your lack of understanding re virtually all aspects of pool is painful(ly obvious).
 
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