Da Poet said:Easier to "play", and easier to "win" are two completely different things. Everytime there's a discussion on this board about barbox's vs 9's, these two things get clustered up.
Betmore did not say it was easier to "win" on barboxes.
Scott Lee said:Sorry Don, but I have to disagree with you here, and agree with Andrew. Two conditions that make playing on a 7' table more difficult than playing on a 9' table are: 1) congestion: 30% less playing area means that the POSSIBILITY of hooking yourself is substancially increased. Most barbox players do NOT have a 14.1 orientation, and as such, are more prone to this problem cropping up; 2) potential to scratch: the balls are the same size, but the playing area is significantly smaller. The pockets are the same size (for the most part). Therefore, there is less rail area to catch the CB...meaning that the potential for scratching is elevated. What do these two things mean? They mean that you'd better have your position play and stroke down pat, or fall victim to these two unchanging differences.
Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com
cuetechasaurus said:Good post Scott, I agree 100%.
I would also like to point out to Williebettmore that, quite often when playing barbox 8ball, if you just smash into clusters, you will often create other clusters. There are ways to "read" a cluster, i.e. get a general idea of where some of the balls will go. I don't like smashing into them every time, because often you are gonna lose the cueball, and rely on luck to get a shot. You would be very surprised at how often you can hook yourself playing like that.
Russ Chewning said:Willie,
You did mention you were not sure how your league players matched up to barbox champions... Maybe this will help.
I played against quite a few on the west coast, and one thing was common amongst them all. If you got to the table and did not either play a frozen-to-a-ball safe or run out, you lost.
The champions I played got out from absolutely everywhere. They played such incredible breakout patterns, it was sickening. They routinely handled tables with 4-5 clusters with ease. It truly was demoralizing playing one of them.
Russ
Southpaw said:bar tables are just break contests actually IMO. Yes a weaker player has the luck factor on a bar table, but the patterns you play on bar tables are much different than the patterns you play on a big table...b/c of the size variable (running into balls and clusters more). All other things being equal, I think the better breaker will come out ahead in the longrun.
Southpaw