dquarasr
Registered
I just read through this entire thread. I will be honest: I can't understand the gentleness of the responses so I will also try to be easy on the OP while calling "BS" in turn on the OP.
My first gut reaction was "You gotta be kidding me. This is either a troll post or the OP is so out of touch it's not even funny." But incredulously, the OP has never heard of the various aiming methods?
Ghost Ball
Fractional Aiming
Poolology
HAMB (just see it, shoot it)
CTE (more than one dialect as far as I can tell)
Shaft / ferrule aiming
there are numerous others but I can't seem to think of them now, bc I use ghost ball.
Has the OP ever read through the pages and pages and pages of posts regarding aiming?
My second, more helpful reaction is "OK, let's assume the OP is sincere and very inexperienced" (which, BTW, I doubt). From OP's posts, seems OP is looking for a simple recipe to successful pool playing. OMG, there are so, so, so many resources.
Just a few I can think of off the top of my head:
Dr. Dave's billiards.colostate.edu
Sharivari on YouTube
FX Billiards on YT
Niels Feijen on YT
Tor Lowry's videos and book(s)
Lil Chris on YT
Anthony Beeler on YT
Ron The Pool Student on YT
Mark Wilson's Play Great Pool book
OP should separate aiming from cue delivery. Aiming is knowing where to deliver the CB. Yes, there are things that affect aim like parallax, vision center, etc. Cue delivery is how to get the CB to the determined aim spot; it involves fundamentals, body alignment, cue alignment, overcoming or customizing for individual physical characteristics.
Yes, there are things like swerve, squirt, cut induced throw, spin induced throw. And of course, one has to learn not only how to pocket the OB, but get the CB into position for the next ball. It's all part of learning the game.
Pool is an extremely complicated game, requiring both physical and mental acuity and expertise. It seems the OP is looking for a simple recipe for success. There is none.
Perhaps OP needs a good instructor, or if self-motivated and good at independent learning, can mine the numerous resources listed above and indeed all over this site and many other sites.
My first gut reaction was "You gotta be kidding me. This is either a troll post or the OP is so out of touch it's not even funny." But incredulously, the OP has never heard of the various aiming methods?
Ghost Ball
Fractional Aiming
Poolology
HAMB (just see it, shoot it)
CTE (more than one dialect as far as I can tell)
Shaft / ferrule aiming
there are numerous others but I can't seem to think of them now, bc I use ghost ball.
Has the OP ever read through the pages and pages and pages of posts regarding aiming?
My second, more helpful reaction is "OK, let's assume the OP is sincere and very inexperienced" (which, BTW, I doubt). From OP's posts, seems OP is looking for a simple recipe to successful pool playing. OMG, there are so, so, so many resources.
Just a few I can think of off the top of my head:
Dr. Dave's billiards.colostate.edu
Sharivari on YouTube
FX Billiards on YT
Niels Feijen on YT
Tor Lowry's videos and book(s)
Lil Chris on YT
Anthony Beeler on YT
Ron The Pool Student on YT
Mark Wilson's Play Great Pool book
OP should separate aiming from cue delivery. Aiming is knowing where to deliver the CB. Yes, there are things that affect aim like parallax, vision center, etc. Cue delivery is how to get the CB to the determined aim spot; it involves fundamentals, body alignment, cue alignment, overcoming or customizing for individual physical characteristics.
Yes, there are things like swerve, squirt, cut induced throw, spin induced throw. And of course, one has to learn not only how to pocket the OB, but get the CB into position for the next ball. It's all part of learning the game.
Pool is an extremely complicated game, requiring both physical and mental acuity and expertise. It seems the OP is looking for a simple recipe for success. There is none.
Perhaps OP needs a good instructor, or if self-motivated and good at independent learning, can mine the numerous resources listed above and indeed all over this site and many other sites.