D-Sub said:
That's true. Somebody has to lose, but I am 100% certain that it shouldn't be me anywhere near as often as it is in these situations. I know if I walk into hard times or some place where high-level players call home, I'm gonna be done pretty quickly, but I lose to people I have no business losing to.
I'm really disappointed right now, and am just plain tired of this.
I was a lot like you. On leagues I was one of the most feared players, no one liked playing me because they knew that there as a good chance I would beat them all 4 games and make it look easy. I'm an average to strong B and most of the leagues were made up of C and C+ players, so the results shouldn't be a surprise.
I would then go to tournaments and even though I knew the caliber of player was better, that is not why I lost most of my matches. I just plain choked more often then I ever did in league. It was not a case of me overestimating my ability, I?m very honest with myself when it comes to shot selection and determining probabilities, I was failing to get out with ball in hand and 2 or 3 easy balls left, I was missing shots where the cue was on the head spot and the object ball was 3 inches from the pocket and 2 inches from the rail.
I tried drinking, and if I could hit that perfect level of intoxication at just the right time, I could easily break and run 2 racks and play smart the other 2 and win 4/0. It just isn't that easy to pull off consistently, but it was more consistent then my shot making on clutch shots and games. I went through this for several years, dominating leagues, pulling off tournaments when I got the mix right, but overall being very dissatisfied in the way that I was shooting and progressing as a player. It does you no good at all if you pull of pin point leaves and then miss easy to medium difficulty shots when they matter most. At the end of a game, the only thing I?m interested in is how I played; my opponents play is completely meaningless to my assessment of my play.
Then we come to the beginning of this year. The first 3 months were disappointing, I didn?t play really bad; I just didn?t play what I would consider to be my average game. I wasn?t able to get out on easy tables; I also wasn?t pulling off the occasional tough shot at a crucial time. In other words, I was losing more games then my opponents were winning. I was even telling friends that I felt like I had gotten as good at this game as I was ever going to and was now in decline.
Then out of total desperation, I had Scott Lee over for a 4 hour lesson. In the first 45 minutes, he showed me on video where at least 80% of my stupid misses where coming from. Small little inconsistencies in my setup and stroke that I wasn?t even aware of were likely responsible for more lost games then I could have ever imagined.
After that lesson, I only had 1 seven hour practice session to work on the things Scott wanted me to change and despite warnings against it; I tried using those things in competition the next day. I had nothing to lose at that point on my leagues so I figured what the hell? Despite the fact that many of the things Scott wanted me to change still felt very alien to me, I felt like I had shot my average to slightly above average game for the first time in 3 months. 2 things I can say for sure about that night, I never once missed an easy shot or the resulting position and I didn?t miss a single straight in shot regardless of the distance. The only explanation for those 2 facts is that my stroke had already begun to become more consistent. I did miss a lot of the same shots that I had been missing for most of the year, but it was the lack stupid misses that I contribute to my success that first night.
Things have only gotten better since then; I never walk away from a miss wondering what went wrong, 9/10 I?m able to pinpoint it exactly and correct it within a shot or 2. While I know I will never be a world champion, I just don?t have that extra something the you need to be born with to reach those ranks, I no longer feel like I?ve hit my peak at 35 years old. I will continue to improve my shotmaking, position play, shot selection, and safeties and the accuracy and consistency of my stroke will not be the limiting factor.
Wow, this got a lot longer then I intended, take it for what it?s worth and I hope it helps.