I took the safety strategy lesson from Stu some time back, and have been practicing those concepts in league play as much as possible. It has really helped my confidence in knowing good and bad maneuvers, and in spotting opponents who play the wrong moves.
Something occurred to me last night about the two rail back scratch safety. As background, let me review what I believe Stu taught me (correct me if I'm wrong). Use the following diagram (sorry for those without Cuetable):
Page 1 shows a typical ending pattern in which your opponent pockets the 1 ball and calls safe, leaving you on near the head rail. This is an ineffective strategy because of the back scratch response, which is on page 2. In this case, you hit the cue ball just hard enough to settle into the back of the rack, which prevents your opponent from playing a safe that can send the cue ball back uptable. The first player hasn't achieved any real advantage other than causing you 1 point (while giving up one himself). Also, you're now in a better position to respond than you were at the head of the table. So the conventional wisdom is that the first player should have pocketed the 1 and come around the table to make a safety by shooting into the pack and opening up some balls.
Now here's the clarification I need: In using the back scratch, you aren't trying to pry any balls loose from the pack, you are just getting the cue ball to the back side. My problem is that your opponent CAN send you back to the head of the table, taking a scratch himself, as in page 3. So if you aren't going to hit the back scratch hard enough to dislodge a few balls, then how is it useful? Your opponent can just "front scratch" and send you back to where you started.
The only answer I can figure is that you have to hit the back scratch hard enough to dislodge some balls, which makes it a somewhat trickier, and different proposition.
What do you think?
Something occurred to me last night about the two rail back scratch safety. As background, let me review what I believe Stu taught me (correct me if I'm wrong). Use the following diagram (sorry for those without Cuetable):
Page 1 shows a typical ending pattern in which your opponent pockets the 1 ball and calls safe, leaving you on near the head rail. This is an ineffective strategy because of the back scratch response, which is on page 2. In this case, you hit the cue ball just hard enough to settle into the back of the rack, which prevents your opponent from playing a safe that can send the cue ball back uptable. The first player hasn't achieved any real advantage other than causing you 1 point (while giving up one himself). Also, you're now in a better position to respond than you were at the head of the table. So the conventional wisdom is that the first player should have pocketed the 1 and come around the table to make a safety by shooting into the pack and opening up some balls.
Now here's the clarification I need: In using the back scratch, you aren't trying to pry any balls loose from the pack, you are just getting the cue ball to the back side. My problem is that your opponent CAN send you back to the head of the table, taking a scratch himself, as in page 3. So if you aren't going to hit the back scratch hard enough to dislodge a few balls, then how is it useful? Your opponent can just "front scratch" and send you back to where you started.
The only answer I can figure is that you have to hit the back scratch hard enough to dislodge some balls, which makes it a somewhat trickier, and different proposition.
What do you think?