10 Ball Punguan Sihombing

A players movement from the time they approach the table, shot to shot, and back to the chair is greatly overlooked by many.
Players, upcoming players, young guns, etc are clueless to the rhythms of the game.

A few years ago I watched a top instructor teaching a lesson for two days.
Day one was focused on video of the swing arm and a slow pull on the last draw before delivery for like 3 hours.
Day two was more of the same with stop shots and 3 and 4 balls runouts incorporated.

The player would go from shot to shot like he had a lightning bolt stuck in his ass then had to slow everything down to a crawl.
The instructor would remind him to slow down his stroke.

I still see this player running around the table like Mario Andretti on speed with a slightly better controlled stroke. Still a B-rated player.

Rhythms and cadence lives matter.
It’s like body defragmentation.
The sooner you find it the better for your brain cells. It’s a dance, a flow.
The better the brain cells the better chance at improvement.
 
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