Cte explained in no words.

I like his position strategy .. keep the CB on the same table as the rest of the balls
As many books as I've read and videos I've watched, this is legitimately the first time I've ever heard mention of what is arguably the most important fundamental aspect of position play. You, sir, are playing chess and we're over here playing Chutes and Ladders. ;)
 
I forget. Were you with or without the cern tesseractial enigma?
I'm not sure what I am. I have axial tilt, which is a result of my vision.
Because my eyes are so widely apart, I have to bend my head sharply to the right or left to level out when I go down on a shot.
That' how I find Y- and X-axis, as long as the shot line is 30 - 40 degrees. I'm terrible at straight shots.
I prefer line in line out aiming if needed. Luckily I have a straight stroke and haven't missed a ball in two weeks.
Artist Rendering.

Cousin.jpgSide eye.jpg
 
I like his position strategy .. keep the CB on the same table as the rest of the balls

Completely off subject, but that absolutely reminded me of a scotch-doubles tourney at my university. Two of our regulars were playing together, both in the US from different Asian countries (one Thai, one from HK). Both spoke very good english, but neither spoke any of the other's native language. It was a common occurrence that native English speakers would have to act as english-to-english translators between the two.

So, during the tourney we allowed communication between players if it wasn't coaching. So, it was okay to ask where the other person wanted the leave, but not to ask any other advice. One of the two got irritated about having difficulty telling the other, and when asked where he wanted the cueball left (for the last time), he just said, 'On the table!'.
 
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