From my experience less calculations improves overall performance substantially
The last possibilty is why CJ suggests aiming inside of the full hit side of the pocket for a center strike on the CB & THEN do a parallel shift to just the TOI. If the stroke misses to center the ball still goes in & if hit with the TOI the ball still goes into the middle & if the stroke misses further to the other side than just the TOI the ball still goes into the thin hit side of the pocket.
I'd say that that increases the margin of error of the stroke.
So, here's another point of my conclusion. One's aim can be off, out side of the pocket & the TOI can get the OB into the full hit side of the pocket,
hence the increase of 'aiming' margin of error. IMHO Only one combination can cause a mis. A ball aligned outside of the pocket AND an
unintended center stirke or a complete cross over to the other side which for all practicle purposes is simply not going to happen & if that is an option then one should be working on nothing but their stoke.
I hope this helps or opens up something else for consideration & discussion.
Regards &[/QUOTE]
You are hitting on some key factors, Rick.
The thing that no one is taking into consideration is when using TOI you will, especially on the longer, more difficult shots actually aim inside the pocket. Since you are using the TOI you know the ball will have a larger pocket zone because it does start inside the actual pocket and throws into the 1st section, 2nd section or 3rd section. Try that with center ball.
This is how it is in golf, and why the pro's approach gives them a bigger target zone. When they hit the golf ball it actually starts out headed outside the fairway, then draws back towards the center.
This is what you can do using TOI or you can do it with spin, however, the spinning requires you to make two calculations and TOI requires only one. From my experience less calculations improves overall performance substantially.
This is another key point, and there are many more in the TOI video. I discovered early on
the ones on this Forum that argue with anything new an potentially helpful were also the ones that never try anything new and potentially helpful. 'The Game is the Teacher'