One of the most phenomenal shots I've ever seen in snooker

Straightpool_99

I see dead balls
Silver Member
A shot like this may fly under the radar for a lot of people, but BELIEVE ME, the degree of difficulty of this shot and the perfection of execution is simply mind-blowing. He made a paper thin hit, the length of the table, over a ball, controlled both the cue ball and the object ball and close to perfect speed. Try it some time.
 
A shot like this may fly under the radar for a lot of people, but BELIEVE ME, the degree of difficulty of this shot and the perfection of execution is simply mind-blowing. He made a paper thin hit, the length of the table, over a ball, controlled both the cue ball and the object ball and close to perfect speed. Try it some time.
It's a natural; table willing.
 
A shot like this may fly under the radar for a lot of people, but BELIEVE ME, the degree of difficulty of this shot and the perfection of execution is simply mind-blowing. He made a paper thin hit, the length of the table, over a ball, controlled both the cue ball and the object ball and close to perfect speed. Try it some time.
:love::love::love::love::love::love::love:
gorgeous execution
 
When you say "gorgeous" do you mean the ball motion or just the bunt?

:ROFLMAO:
answering your post seriously although by the emoji it seems you were kidding
first of all it was a stroke not a bunt full backswing to his bridge and nice follow thru
the accuracy at that distance and being jacked up
simply gorgeous
 
answering your post seriously although by the emoji it seems you were kidding
first of all it was a stroke not a bunt full backswing to his bridge and nice follow thru
the accuracy at that distance and being jacked up
simply gorgeous

Ok. He did go into the CB. I avoid the masse hazard by using a hard tip and tapping the ball. You'd be amazed at what air stroking these will do. If you set the cue down in line, that's 100% of the aiming. Haven't perfected using more speed but that's just a stroke thing it'll come.
 
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Ok. He did go into the CB. I avoid the masse hazard by using a hard tip and tapping the ball. You'd be amazed at what air stroking these will do. If you set the cue down in line, that's 100% of the aiming. Haven't perfected using more speed but that's just a stroke thing it'll come.
the masse hazard is often from not hitting perfectly on the vertical axis
vision center and arm angle differences in your set up when over a ball can contribute to that
jmho
icbw
 
the masse hazard is often from not hitting perfectly on the vertical axis
vision center and arm angle differences in your set up when over a ball can contribute to that
jmho
icbw
Hence tapping the ball. The vision center and misalignment is irrelevant with air shooting and double vision; CBL. Serious.
 
Please explain
If you’d rather not derail this thread a PM is OK
No it's very relevant. The way it's commonly done, those shots are executed "from the hip". Doable but truthfully, those guys miss enough. Made me rethink the process. With air aiming, stroking, and shot rehearsal, I have a no guesswork PSR. And since it's all done right over the cueball, you come down right on the shot line.
 
The exquisite skill of this shot was in its accuracy at that distance. When it is that thin, you have to get it absolutely perfect or it will show up in the speed control. If you are playing a safe in snooker, where speed control is often key (you want to get close to the end rail), try to find a half-ball contact. Very forgiving in terms of speed control.
 
Do you think the player was playing that path to the back of the green? Was that his intended shot?
I like to think so. But in truth, no, he was probably trying to contact the ob a tad thicker and come back the other side of the green. But incredibly difficult at that distance having to bridge over the ball like he did.
 
The exquisite skill of this shot was in its accuracy at that distance. When it is that thin, you have to get it absolutely perfect or it will show up in the speed control. If you are playing a safe in snooker, where speed control is often key (you want to get close to the end rail), try to find a half-ball contact. Very forgiving in terms of speed control.
I like to put things in perspective and I do see detriment in the creative literacy aspect.
Remove all the balls except the cue ball. You can retain the elevated bridge.

What did he do besides lag the ball? Anyone can do this daily - hourly, until they know everything about it.

Put the yellow back in. Was there anything different about the execution?

Apparently his stroke is grooved enough to deliver the required stroke. Whatever ensued is a function of the equipment and environment.

The superlatives may inspire the noobs but also discourage the rest when faced with the unbreakable "results sold separately" clause.
 
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