Spider;
Straight pool is not the only game I play but it is far and away my favorite. I'm pretty low on the scale and have nothing to lose and I believe I have an open mind. I will keep your advice in mind and try it at the first opportunity. Didn't mean to sound like a wise guy.
Dave Nelson
You're not, at all. 14.1 is a finesse game--- but the thread was based on 14.1 "pathetic noobs" (i.e. complete beginner). If you have no finesse and lack finer CB control to repeatedly come into the muck with control, you have a very low probability to keep a run going.
I liken this train of thought to a Jack Nicklaus quote from years ago on the Golf Channel. A similar question was asked of Jack regarding how we would teach a beginning player. He replied by saying, "Teach them how to hit hard and long."
The interviewer said, "Well, Jack, what about straightness?!? What good is teaching someone to hit 300 yards off the tee if they're buried in the woods on every shot?"
Jack says, "Because if you take that approach with a beginner and they become the straightest hitter on planet earth but can't get past 250 on the tee, they'll never score on a real course. It's easier to teach straightness to someone who can drive 300 yards than to teach a straight player how to hit 300 yards years into their development."
I'm paraphrasing, of course, but that's the main idea. Watch guys like Hohmann play 14.1. He's arguably one of the best 14.1 on earth right now and he hits many of his break shots at 9b break speed. Maybe not at a 100% 9ball break speed, but VERY hard. Many times the CB flies into the kitchen and spins to the center, two-rails. Conversely, someone like Hopkins will pick apart the rack a few balls at a time.
The style of play from the old guard (Sigel, Hopkins, Mizerak) versus the new guard (Hohmann, Schmidt, and that Russian kid who I forget his name -- very explosive) are completely different.