Yep. This shot is the only shot that counts - shooting it perfectly is your only job.One ball at a time
pj
chgo
Yep. This shot is the only shot that counts - shooting it perfectly is your only job.One ball at a time
That’s why I don’t count other peoples money
Good post cowboy![]()
Yes and no. This is sound advice for most players but the reality is that not everyone is nice and there are some very bad winning players out there who look down on others and can't stand to see others win even when they themselves have played their best on the day and finished second or third or wherever. They are just as winning as winners with the "right" attitude.Friend just sent this worth watching if your brave.
Nobody ever performs perfectly, even when it appears that they do. For example, a player runs slightly out of their intended position on their key ball during a runout but they make the runout anyway. They, in the moment, forget about this as soon as it happens. Those watching who are knowledgable about the game assume subconsciously that the player wasn't playing for precise position, and consciously they see it as perfect play. On another day in the same situation they dog the next ball - and then they beat themselves up about position on the key ball. Whether or not you should beat yourself up is another question but the reality is that if people call you a sore loser then you are a sore loser because it's how you react externally to/in the presence of others that determines this trait. People don't misunderstand you, they observe your behaviour and respond accordingly. This is not a criticism - if being a sore loser turns you into a winner and that's important to you then make it work. But the greatest players in all sports are those that win again and again but are humble when they lose.People have misinterpreted my reactions during competition. When I was into bowling, and more recently with pool, people have told me I am a sore loser and I’m very competitive. They misunderstood me.
I don’t care if I win or lose. I DO care if I play poorly. If I perform well and lose, I am happy. If I perform poorly and win, I’m dubious. If I perform poorly and lose, I’m disappointed but not because I lost, but because I performed poorly.
The more I practice, the better the rolls are.
Yep, that's my experience.In my experience, the better players always seem to get luckier than I do…
I may have overstated it. Maybe sore loser in the usual connotation is the wrong term. Let’s call it “disappointed loser.” I always congratulate the winner, sincerely. I do internally beat myself up BUT in the last six months or so I have really made progress in taking losses for what they are - inconsequential. I tell teammates when they get down on themselves “a hundred years from now this won’t matter.”Nobody ever performs perfectly, even when it appears that they do. For example, a player runs slightly out of their intended position on their key ball during a runout but they make the runout anyway. They, in the moment, forget about this as soon as it happens. Those watching who are knowledgable about the game assume subconsciously that the player wasn't playing for precise position, and consciously they see it as perfect play. On another day in the same situation they dog the next ball - and then they beat themselves up about position on the key ball. Whether or not you should beat yourself up is another question but the reality is that if people call you a sore loser then you are a sore loser because it's how you react externally to/in the presence of others that determines this trait. People don't misunderstand you, they observe your behaviour and respond accordingly. This is not a criticism - if being a sore loser turns you into a winner and that's important to you then make it work. But the greatest players in all sports are those that win again and again but are humble when they lose.
This, we can all agree on“a hundred years from now this won’t matter.”
Depends on how much you bet…..This, we can all agree on![]()
P.S I just would like to emphasize something. Here I am not speaking about low-level players where the gab difference in skill is big. I am only speaking about top-end players, the speed of pros or a little lesser than pros by a small margin. I don't want to put letters for grading here because the last time I did we had issues because people scale things differently.Its simple. You just gotta get the rolls.
If you want to win a tournament, you need to get lucky such that you get the rolls until the end of the final. Btw having the rolls go along ways of your opponent not getting any. So even if you're playing horrible, if your opponents keep getting unlucky or bad rolls either by layout or break or both, then its your time to win.
Very very simple, it is sad but the truth that nobody wants to admit.
To us....a hundred years from now this won’t matter.
This is the biggest piece of nonsense that I have ever read on this site. Seriously, you believe that at the highest level of sports performance, that luck is the most deciding factor in winners vs. losers? Why would anyone bother to try and become great at a sport if luck was the biggest deciding factor when they meet other pros in competition?P.S I just would like to emphasize something. Here I am not speaking about low-level players where the gab difference in skill is big. I am only speaking about top-end players, the speed of pros or a little lesser than pros by a small margin. I don't want to put letters for grading here because the last time I did we had issues because people scale things differently.
But yea I am speaking about the top players here. --- Obviously, if one guy is a top player playing a very very low-skilled player he would beat him every time.
LOL you know nothing about pool.This is the biggest piece of nonsense that I have ever read on this site. Seriously, you believe that at the highest level of sports performance, that luck is the most deciding factor in winners vs. losers? Why would anyone bother to try and become great at a sport if luck was the biggest deciding factor when they meet other pros in competition?
By far, the MOST deciding factor when great players meet in competition is not luck, it is almost always who performs at their highest level most consistently at that time.
That's funny!LOL you know nothing about pool.
I once was told by a very smart pool person that dogging it was the fear of winning.
Scared to win he said.
I remember that one... People tend to forget that SVB had his chances and put the ball into the rail on a couple of occassions. Of course that's what happens when someone speaks to an SVB performance on the world stage...lol. Guess the other guy was just lucky that SVB missed when he shouldn't have and that the tourney switched to the wooden rack at that point.One more, Shane Van boening was playing real good last world championships, he ran 7 racks in a row in two SETS. The 3rd sET against a player who isn't a caliber of him but he's still a pro. The other guy got every roll and every layout. The layout is huge in the game of pool if its easy even ur grandson can run out. Then what happens, Shane who ran 7 racks in a row two different sets has lost to a player who isn't as good as him. Its not suddenly SVB lost skill, right? its just the table decided that he has to lose this time.
I don't mind people being ultra competitive but I can't stand people throwing tantrums or mumbling about how unlucky they are, acting all dejected and then lighting up when their opponent misses.People have misinterpreted my reactions during competition. When I was into bowling, and more recently with pool, people have told me I am a sore loser and I’m very competitive. They misunderstood me.
I don’t care if I win or lose. I DO care if I play poorly. If I perform well and lose, I am happy. If I perform poorly and win, I’m dubious. If I perform poorly and lose, I’m disappointed but not because I lost, but because I performed poorly.
I am seriously taking @Tin Man’s recent post re: best v worst performance scatter and trying to adjust my reaction to poor performance as just inevitable reality.