Nice win!
IDK if you heard someone reply: "is Brett still here" (he's the owner, and def much better than everyone else). ha ha."Who's the best player here?!"
"Who's the best player here?!"
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It's actually pretty amazing how well people can play when they AREN'T cueing straight. I'm going through a similar thing right now. Just returning to the basics and drilling straight in shots, has me getting closer and closer to straight every day. I think one of biggest differences between good and great players is the great players actually enjoy working on the really monotonous stuff. Most others just want to play pool.I beat Rachel 13-12, 11-8, and she won the last set 7-5. She was a bit off her game, but I also played pretty good for me. I made a tiny adjustment, I had a local helping me with my game recently, and we discovered I was hitting straight in shots with a touch of left spin (when I was intending to hit center).
I couldn't fix it with my sighting, but at my home fisher price table before my match with Rachel, I was fooling around with it. I purposely moved my tip a hair to the right (in my vision), and couldn't believe the cb was now going dead straight with no spin on the stop shot. So every break with Rachel, and every straight center ball shot/draw shot, I aimed a hair to the right with my tip. I had way way better accuracy than before. Some of my breaks were still wild, but I had some where the CB was super super good and straight, wheras on prior sets that was very rare.
Well good job putting the breaks on that trend yesterday!Funny, I was just looking at my livestream history (where I was the streamer), and my first match was with Rachel. Look at how our fargorates have changed. ha [...]
Is there some criteria for making a record inactive?Before the Helsinki Open, you were 699 with 98 games. It's just that the record was marked inactive and not shown. That -51 is just a meaningless number--not a rating.
A touch of inside you say?I beat Rachel 13-12, 11-8, and she won the last set 7-5. She was a bit off her game, but I also played pretty good for me. I made a tiny adjustment, I had a local helping me with my game recently, and we discovered I was hitting straight in shots with a touch of left spin (when I was intending to hit center).
I couldn't fix it with my sighting, but at my home fisher price table before my match with Rachel, I was fooling around with it. I purposely moved my tip a hair to the right (in my vision), and couldn't believe the cb was now going dead straight with no spin on the stop shot. So every break with Rachel, and every straight center ball shot/draw shot, I aimed a hair to the right with my tip. I had way way better accuracy than before. Some of my breaks were still wild, but I had some where the CB was super super good and straight, wheras on prior sets that was very rare.

I have been playing a ton of 10 ball (to practice its break) which I haven't in a year, to get ready for the big event I signed up for next year. I feel much better on its break than a year ago.I have a feeling now is the time to pick something you haven't practiced in a while and smash it to death. For example, for the next three weeks, stop playing absolutely any real games with anyone no matter how much they ask you, and practice one drill until you can run out. Like the one-pocket L drill, or brainwash, or positional clusters. Pick one that is hard for you.
Do this experiment, and try to be very disciplined. Again don't play any real games.
Then go back to tournaments and see if you jump up permanently a little bit
I give you the challenge to run two consecutive racks of one-pocket L drills on video by Dec 1st. Attempt for no more than 45 minutes at a time, and take early breaks. But at all costs do not switch back to something more "fun". Not until you have made the successful video.
Race to 5 for 500!? You guys are fuggin gambling I love itSomething all came together the last week. I've played some of the best pool in my life.
Last Tuesday I beat Rachel in a race to 7 10 ball on stream. I won 7-5. Then we went to another room and played together partners vs 2 other guys, 10 ball again, for 100 per man. We both shot lights out and got up 6-2. Somehow we lost from there. I missed a hanger 9 to get on the 10 at hill-hill. I was so embarrassed, that I payed off for both of us.
Then I played one of the guys solo 9 ball a race to 5 for 500. The whole time I was thinking about the dogged 9. I also had to play fast because we drove together, and she had to get home. So I had to win fast. I got up 4-0 before he had a shot other than a break or push. I missed 1 ball the whole set, and won 5-0. It might have been the best I ever played.
Then yesterday I drove to a backpocket tournament. I had brain farts during the tournament and shot at the wrong pocket, ha ha. But afterwards, I was just sitting doing nothing. A customer came in and got a table. Out of the corner of my eye I saw he couldn't find the rack, and the houseman showed him. (diamond barbox). I figured he was a banger and didn't give him a second thought. Then later I went to the corner of the room to make a phone call, and he was in my line of sight. He was a player. I'm thinking to myself, wtf, he didn't know where the rack is but he could play. btw, he was Asian. It didn't add up. So I walked over to him and said how could you not know where the rack is but you can play. His english was bad. I asked if he wanted to play. He said yes. I asked where he was from, he said China. I said hello to him in Mandarin and said I've been there 5 times. He had a snooker stance, so I asked if he played C8B. He said yes. It must have been his first time ever on a Diamond. I asked if he knew who Siming Chen is, and he said yes. Anyway, we played 2 hours for fun, and I swear he must have thought I was a pro. I was running out like water. I've never played that good in my life, for sure. I actually wanted to quit as I was getting tired, but didn't want it to end. I also went up the houseman and told him to make sure he welcomes this guy when he comes in again, he's a player, and wants to learn.
I finally quit and rested an hour. Then I go up to the best player in the room, and he's been one of the best players in PA for 30 years. He's a 694 now at prob age 55. I said to him: "Can you give me some lessons". He says "how much". I say "25 a set". He touches my pants wallet and laughs and says "you're wallet is too thick for that!".
I walk away and he comes finds me later and says ok. So we play races to 5 9 ball on the barbox for 25, even. I picked the same table I played the Chinese guy on, even though there was a banger on the next table, and the tables were close together, and the whole room was about empty. I wanted to keep everything the same.
Well, it worked. I won the first set 5-3. We played 5 sets total, he won 3 sets to my 2. All were close. I was getting out, breaking and running, and playing kick safeties like Efren. Kicking 2 rails to the edge of the ball and hiding it. Playing trick shot tickies to start a run, and going head to head with him on push strategies. He even said to me that I played great afterwards.
I didn't win a dime, but felt like a million bucks afterwards. Still on the high now the next day.