Biloxi Boy
Man With A Golden Arm
Everyone listen up. I don't want any of you folks wandering off and getting lost causing all of us to stop, double back, and look for you. In fact, everyone going on this walk, grab hold to this rope and don't let go . . . pay attention!
How often do we get an opportunity to shoot a combination? You know, cue ball to ball A into ball B ultimately sinking ball C? To me, these are critically important shots often producing game changing results. But as important as they are, we don't seem to ever talk about them. Are combinations something that you look for and assess, even play shapes toward, or just something that you find yourself forced into after losing control or all else fails?
Shooting through the pack in 14.1 or One Pocket is one example. Success with this type of shot seems largely dependent upon one's ability to see and recognize the pattern in interlocked balls and knowledge of how the pack will react to different forces exerted upon particular places. Shooting through clusters has always fascinated me, especially when a ball comes ripping from the group, traveling "backwards" from the direction of the stroke. (I've always told y'all that it takes very little to hold my attention.) Physical execution of these shots seems a simple matter. Their true art and challenge resides in deciphering a code whose variation or arrangement one might be seeing for the first and last time ever. But, the patterns are in there, locked in there, and you can learn to read them. I find great satisfaction in watching as the intended ball rockets into my intended pocket on greased rails.
Chasing the cheese in 9 Ball provides another classic example of combinations in action. Even though talent and knowledge are brought to bear in executing these, their attempt and accomplishment are usually met with no small amount of derision. How is it that a legal win for the cash has come to be such a bad thing?
I am sure there are other examples of routine employment of combinations in our game. Does anyone actually practice combinations? If so, what drills have you found?
How often do we get an opportunity to shoot a combination? You know, cue ball to ball A into ball B ultimately sinking ball C? To me, these are critically important shots often producing game changing results. But as important as they are, we don't seem to ever talk about them. Are combinations something that you look for and assess, even play shapes toward, or just something that you find yourself forced into after losing control or all else fails?
Shooting through the pack in 14.1 or One Pocket is one example. Success with this type of shot seems largely dependent upon one's ability to see and recognize the pattern in interlocked balls and knowledge of how the pack will react to different forces exerted upon particular places. Shooting through clusters has always fascinated me, especially when a ball comes ripping from the group, traveling "backwards" from the direction of the stroke. (I've always told y'all that it takes very little to hold my attention.) Physical execution of these shots seems a simple matter. Their true art and challenge resides in deciphering a code whose variation or arrangement one might be seeing for the first and last time ever. But, the patterns are in there, locked in there, and you can learn to read them. I find great satisfaction in watching as the intended ball rockets into my intended pocket on greased rails.
Chasing the cheese in 9 Ball provides another classic example of combinations in action. Even though talent and knowledge are brought to bear in executing these, their attempt and accomplishment are usually met with no small amount of derision. How is it that a legal win for the cash has come to be such a bad thing?
I am sure there are other examples of routine employment of combinations in our game. Does anyone actually practice combinations? If so, what drills have you found?
Last edited: