A rack of 15 8-Balls...

It can be that on all other shots you are planning position with the cue ball after the other shots. I started planning position after the eight or nine and the problem vanished immediately. Straight pool helps in that form because you have to play position for the break ball. The theory of this is you are keeping your brain in the same routine as all the other shots you have made.

I agree with this as it helped me too.

Always plan something to do with the cue ball even when playing on the last ball, look at the shot and tell yourself ok i will make this ball and stop the cue ball or send it to the rail there or whatever as long as your concentrating on accomplishing something.
 
Rather than buying multiple 8s and 9s...why not switch the order you're shooting in practice for a little bit...reverse the order and shoot from the 9 down to the 1...see if you still have the same issue shooting the 1 & 2 (acting as the 8 & 9)...

Jason
 
You start with ball in hand, get position on 1 off of pocketing the 8. Respot 8 on button before shooting 1. Shoot 1, get position on the 8, pocket 8 getting position on 2. Respot 8 before pocketing 2. Repeat through 6 ball. 1 through 6 are evenly spaced on head string with the 1 and 6 about a 1/2 diamond out from the side rail.

I suppose you can make any rules you wish but the drill would be designed to have you start over after a miss. That could serve to put some pressure on sinking the 8 (or 9 when you use it instead of the 8).

I would think another potentially good drill to address your issue would be to throw out 2 or 3 balls at random with the 8 or 9. Run out in order. This would have you shooting the 8 or 9 more often. Keep track of your wins/losses with a win being a complete run out. Again, puts a little pressure on hitting the 8 (or 9).

It seems obvious to me you've created a mental block with the 8 or 9 but are otherwise a very good player. You just need to get your confidence back when shooting the 8 or 9 when under some pressure. I think once you have a few league games where you drill the 8 and 9 center pocket, your problem will likely disappear rather quickly. I'd also check the grip when under these pressure situations to see if you're not tightening up when shooting these shots causing a slight pull or push.

That is an AWESOME drill! Thank you for posting this.
 
It can be that on all other shots you are planning position with the cue ball after the other shots. I started planning position after the eight or nine and the problem vanished immediately. Straight pool helps in that form because you have to play position for the break ball. The theory of this is you are keeping your brain in the same routine as all the other shots you have made.

thats how i do it, on the 9-ball i imagine a 10-ball (often near the side pocket). this does the trick, 100%!
 
Getting over it

I also started trying for position; I also started putting
The 8 in different positions and shooting it like any other ball, same for 9.
 
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