Rome wasn't built in a day
all day yesterday and today, i struggled and struggled practicing straight. i was getting hot...... i tried different things but nothing helped. so, finally, after nearly tipping my table over, i practiced some 9ball. that went much better. does anyone else run into the 14.1 wall? if so what do you do to get out of a straight pool slump?
sausage:
Without knowing your specific issue, the only things I can recommend are the following:
1. How do you fare in another pattern game, like, say, 8-ball? Unlike rotation games like 9-ball, where the "pattern" of the balls is already pre-determined for you when you break the rack -- i.e. you have to shoot the balls in rotation -- straight pool and 8-ball require you to figure out the best pattern on your own.
2. Are you using equipment that may not be conducive to a good pattern-style game like 8-ball and straight pool? In other words, are you using a Red Circle cue ball, that "zings" around the table, not letting you (or hobbling you from) applying precise touch to limit cue ball movement for the next shot? A Red Circle cue ball is optimized for rotation pool, and thus it easily moves great distances around the table, a feature necessary for good rotation pool position play.
3. Where do your issues in straight pool lay? In other words, are you shooting shots OK, but when you get down to the last couple of balls, do you falter because you're not selecting the proper break ball (and the key ball to get position on that break ball)?
4. Do you find that, like many rotation pool players playing straights for the first time, they miss shots in a straight pool game that they'd NEVER miss in a rotation pool game? If so, this might point to the mental side of the game. Straight pool has the strange ability to make straight shooters miss shots they'd rarely miss, because he/she is concentrating on getting a big run (vs. only having to worry about 9 or less balls). I find when I'm playing rotation type games like 9-ball, there is less pressure, because I subconsciously know I'm only EVER worried about 9 or less balls, and even if I miss, I stand a good chance of not giving my opponent an easy shot at that one object ball. Straight pool, on the other hand, because one can shoot at *any* ball on the table, induces more pressure NOT TO MISS, because a miss is more costly than in 9-ball.
5. Are you expecting Rome to be built in less than a day? In other words, if you shoot a mean game of 9-ball, are you "expecting" that you should also be a good straight pool player, merely because the 9-ball zealots will say "9-ball is more difficult because there's only ever one object ball on the table at any given time, whereas in straight pool you can shoot at anything you want"? (That latter notion from the 9-ball camp really cracks me up by the way -- talk about horse blinders! But I digress...)
I hope this is helpful; I'm sure you're going to get a TON of great replies here!
-Sean