Being great at anything requires Practice, and building mussel memory.
Most people do not like Practicing.
JMHO
Most people do not like Practicing.
JMHO
Bullshit!! You don't learn position routes in game play, you learn it in practice. When an opponent pulls off a nice shot that the guy in his chair didnt see before you better believe that the guy in his chair practices and learns that shot. Why do you think they have practice tables at the Mosconi Cup and other tournaments??i dont care about golf or watch it
or any sports
pool is nearly physically effortless to play
somehow archer after a certain point still was one of the best of his time didnt spend hrs doing what he already could do
and im willing to bet he wasnt the only great to do the same
Mmmm, the impepata di cozze that I had in Turin is my favorite mussel memory.…mussel memory
you think pros need to practice position?Bullshit!! You don't learn position routes in game play, you learn it in practice. When an opponent pulls off a nice shot that the guy in his chair didnt see before you better believe that the guy in his chair practices and learns that shot. Why do you think they have practice tables at the Mosconi Cup and other tournaments??
I don't think you understand the natural evolution of all sports. Take baseball for instance. When the game first began, you just played it. The best players among your peer group moved up the ladder. And on and on it went. Ted Williams wasn't playing travel ball and training year around. Today, they all do.you think pros need to practice position?
playing 14 hrs a day is trainingI don't think you understand the natural evolution of all sports. Take baseball for instance. When the game first began, you just played it. The best players among your peer group moved up the ladder. And on and on it went. Ted Williams wasn't playing travel ball and training year around. Today, they all do.
Pool has evolved. It now requires at least some level of training. I do suspect that a player that does nothing but play pool 10 to 16 hours a day, will get pretty good. But not as good as the kid that plays 8 to 14 hours a day and trains for 2.
Been many years since I read Ted Williams’s autobiography. As a kid in San Diego he played baseball constantly and year round. I recall he criticized little league because a kid might get 3 or 4 ABs. He would get dozens a day in the sand lots. Granted, he didn’t get the coaching and they didn’t have the training videos. But it actually proves your point.I don't think you understand the natural evolution of all sports. Take baseball for instance. When the game first began, you just played it. The best players among your peer group moved up the ladder. And on and on it went. Ted Williams wasn't playing travel ball and training year around. Today, they all do.
Pool has evolved. It now requires at least some level of training. I do suspect that a player that does nothing but play pool 10 to 16 hours a day, will get pretty good. But not as good as the kid that plays 8 to 14 hours a day and trains for 2.
I'm sure that they work on whatever they feel they need to work on whenever they need to work on it. Us missing position means losing a match or a few bucks, a pro missing position might mean they go without a paycheck.you think pros need to practice position?
at a tournament?
No, when you are playing you shoot the shots presented to you that give you the best chance to win. When you practice you work the areas of your game that you need to improve.playing 14 hrs a day is training
I can't begin to think just how wrong this is. Once a player gets good he may need just tuning but to get that speed is NEVER going to happen just from playing. Known a bunch of ss's in my life and they all put in table time to get there. I'll agree that there are pure 'naturals' but they are way in minority. I've known/seen about 3-4 in 40+yrs of pool.sure to be a top pro you need training and daily hard work as getting to that tiny bit better then the rest is what determines if you win or not.
but for the average player hoping to get near shortstop speed, which he isn't ever going to be as he doesn't have enough natural talent. just playing will get him to about his peek.
and if your a gambler then the practice time other than just getting in stroke is costing you money rather than making it playing.
I think a natural talent+work will always rise above an average player+work. I'm not saying an average player can't get decent. They can, but I think a born natural has a higher ceiling and will reach a short stop level far sooner than an average player.I can't begin to think just how wrong this is. Once a player gets good he may need just tuning but to get that speed is NEVER going to happen just from playing. Known a bunch of ss's in my life and they all put in table time to get there. I'll agree that there are pure 'naturals' but they are way in minority. I've known/seen about 3-4 in 40+yrs of pool.
The player that works the hardest will come out on top regardless of talent. i've known a few stupidly good players that were truly horrible when they first started.I think a natural talent+work will always rise above an average player+work. I'm not saying an average player can't get decent. They can, but I think a born natural has a higher ceiling and will reach a short stop level far sooner than an average player.
I've always had excellent hand eye coordination in about everything I've ever put my hands to, but pool still alludes me. I'm decent, but far from short stop level. I'm not really a born athlete but I get good in something then after I'm proficient at it I lose interest. I've never lost interest in pool. I've got burned out on it before, but I always come back after a bit of time off. My other hobbies and interests are just gone forever once I lose interest.
I think that's one of the special things about pool, there's always another layer to learn or master.