seymore15074 said:I don't think everyone is grasping how much can go wrong with the breakout. Sure it looks easy, and sure you can hit it...but what do you really think you are going to do?
So much can go terribly wrong with just a hair of difference. If you execute it PERFECTLY and basically get the cue to stop right at the 8, you have a shot. Not a great shot, but it's not going to stop your run. A hair to the other side and you hook yourself, or a hair to the other side and you send the cue straight at the 5...possibly getting too close or a terrible angle. If you go rail first, that's even worse...then even successful breakouts result in being out in the middle banking the 5... This is the kind of situation that you learn from when you make the wrong decision hill-hill in a match...I'll take my chances leaving a safe. It's tight work down there; it's not like you're just pushing a ball out toward a pocket, you'd be pushing balls together and possibly off of rails all around where you are trying to put your cue ball!
"So much can go terribly wrong" is a big statement and simply not true. Terribly wrong is scratching or getting hooked. Everything else should be manageable.
In my break-out approach, I'm pocketing the 4-ball in the side-pocket, going off the side-rail and running into the 8-ball. My contact point on the side-rail is going to determine how I hit the 8 so I can make sure I don't get safe. My speed is going to determine how this cluster opens so I can be pretty certain not to hit it too hard or soft and as for losing my cueball and heading toward the 5, that's manageable. It's perfectly reasonable to assume I still get a shot and even if I don't, I won't be left safe and will have options that should still yield a win.