I had an interesting experience the other day that shattered my belief about the proportionate importance of aim vs stroke.
I was practicing some trouble shots that involved both a distance from the ball and an angle that was easy to misjudge. When I missed I wasn't sure if it was that I didn't see the shot right or that I didn't deliver the cue ball well.
Then tried something that I haven't before. I put a ring on the pool table (those little 3 ring binder page protectors) so that I could set up the same shot every time, then I put another ring on the pool table where the base of the ghost ball needed to be to pocket it.
Now, shooting the same shot with a very easy to distinguish target, I made the shot 10, 12, 15 times in a row. It was unbelievable. This long, thin, cut, that I have been missing for years, and now I was firing it in hard, soft, with inside, outside, and I almost never missed.
The point is that after this I have come to believe that once you develop a straight stroke and good fundamentals, aiming and visualizing the shot correctly is far more difficult than getting the cue ball there. So while other people may disdain aiming threads, I am going to start spending more time on this and less time on those long straight ins....
I was practicing some trouble shots that involved both a distance from the ball and an angle that was easy to misjudge. When I missed I wasn't sure if it was that I didn't see the shot right or that I didn't deliver the cue ball well.
Then tried something that I haven't before. I put a ring on the pool table (those little 3 ring binder page protectors) so that I could set up the same shot every time, then I put another ring on the pool table where the base of the ghost ball needed to be to pocket it.
Now, shooting the same shot with a very easy to distinguish target, I made the shot 10, 12, 15 times in a row. It was unbelievable. This long, thin, cut, that I have been missing for years, and now I was firing it in hard, soft, with inside, outside, and I almost never missed.
The point is that after this I have come to believe that once you develop a straight stroke and good fundamentals, aiming and visualizing the shot correctly is far more difficult than getting the cue ball there. So while other people may disdain aiming threads, I am going to start spending more time on this and less time on those long straight ins....