agreed.Lame![]()
"come to the mountain"?!?! Pulleezzze...I just love the exclusionary aspect of the CTE religion.
Hal = Yoda. Stan = Kenobi. Spidey = Luke. CTE Zealots = padawans.

agreed.Lame![]()
I don't know Stan, have never met or talked with him. But, from everything I have heard about him, he is a great instructor and person. I have heard enough about CTE that I have no doubt that it works, and works very well. I have yet to hear from anyone that actually went to Stan, and then said they were ripped off and the system doesn't work as promised.
That said, I'm not at all surprised, very disappointed, but not surprised that Stan cancelled this venture. I'm sure that he charges a considerable sum for lessons, and the DVD would be much, much cheaper than the actual lessons. While in person lessons are always much better, he would probably be cutting a nice size hole in his pocket if the DVD came out. Disappointing for us, for understandable for him. Then yet, he may have just decided that it was to much work to make the DVD than it was worth for him, who knows his actual reason behind not doing it??
Maybe some day someone will put it all on a DVD or whatever they have by then. I think a lot will be very surprised at what they learn! In the meantime, I don't understand why so many are so adamant that it doesn't or can't work, when they haven't received proper instruction on it???? Are they afraid it will work and they missed out on something by not getting the lessons, so they dismiss it out of hand, or what????
Now, see, this is what I just don't understand.??? People like you won't give the CTE method a fair shake just because it can't be, or isn't put on paper and geometrically "proven" to all. You want to dismiss it for these reasons, and these reasons alone, even though there are several top players that attest to it's validity.
What top players? There's Landon annnnddddd...
This is the beauty of marketing. If something gets repeated enough, people just start passing it on as truth. But the only high level player that I know of for sure is Landon. Then we have a handful of A players including JB, stan, and possibly spidey though I've seen him sink maybe 2 balls in my life.
Only hal claimed a number of pros use it. JB claims busty uses it but I need to hear that from busty, no offense to john or anyone else.
As to why it's not getting a fair shake due to the "on paper" bit - because anything else that works, works on paper. And/or on video. What other system or pool concept works, but is inexplicable on paper? If I claim I can throw a ball in with inside spin, or a halfball hit sends the OB on a 30ish deg. line... I can then demonstrate that in video. Fractional aiming can be diagrammed. Ghostball obviously diagrams well.
Many of the CTE detractors aren't even looking to show that it's useless or can't work. What they're claiming is that the system relies on estimation, feel, adjustments, etc. You know, the sort of thing that can't be diagrammed. A simple admission of this would go a long way towards removing some of that skepticism.
What top players? There's Landon annnnddddd...
This is the beauty of marketing. If something gets repeated enough, people just start passing it on as truth. But the only high level player that I know of for sure is Landon. Then we have a handful of A players including JB, stan, and possibly spidey though I've seen him sink maybe 2 balls in my life.
Only hal claimed a number of pros use it. JB claims busty uses it but I need to hear that from busty, no offense to john or anyone else.
As to why it's not getting a fair shake due to the "on paper" bit - because anything else that works, works on paper. And/or on video. What other system or pool concept works, but is inexplicable on paper? If I claim I can throw a ball in with inside spin, or a halfball hit sends the OB on a 30ish deg. line... I can then demonstrate that in video. Fractional aiming can be diagrammed. Ghostball obviously diagrams well.
Many of the CTE detractors aren't even looking to show that it's useless or can't work. What they're claiming is that the system relies on estimation, feel, adjustments, etc. You know, the sort of thing that can't be diagrammed. A simple admission of this would go a long way towards removing some of that skepticism.
What top players? There's Landon annnnddddd...
Let those who seek the knowledge, come to the mountain. This info should never become pedestrian.
Koop: noted, but do we have non-anecdotal evidence of this? Something that isn't just I-heard-from-a-friend? A link on the internet, a line in a book?
I got the beer and will set up the altar.But of course. Let's all don togas, aluminum foil caps, put on our decoder rings, and cha-cha our way right over to that hill-o-beans!
Who's bringing the beer
Lou Figueroa
(burp)
I got the beer and will set up the altar.![]()
Altar?!
OK. Virgins. We're gonna need some virgins too, then.
Lou Figueroa
Stevie and Gerda have both said themselves they took lessons from Stan and learned Pro One.
Right after Gerda learned, a few months back, she quickly won the next tournament she entered. Stevie has been lighting it up ever since.
Looks like Matt Krah is another.
http://www.justcueit.com/Lessons.html
Regards,
Koop
\Joey: We're on the same page there. CTE guys have trouble admitting this and that's always bugged me. It claims exactness where exactness isn't really possible.
Hu: I understand the nature of trying to do video proof of something, I've often made the same argument. If I see a guy pivot before shooting... maybe the pivot helped and maybe it's clicking your heels.
I remember you saying you tried something like quarters but the perception issues made it no use to you. But even if doesn't work for you, it can be geometrically proven. I don't buy the theory that "just because it works on paper, doesn't mean it will work in the pool hall". If it doesn't work in the pool hall, some part of it was wrong on paper. There are tricks you can do to take human error out of the system. Beam a carpenter's level at your halfball hit, then freeze a 2nd ball on it so that its edge splits that thin red beam. Smack a cue ball into the 2nd ball and the halfball hit goes where it's supposed to (usual throw disclaimers apply).
The same halfball hit can be backed up by physics. A crapload of math has already been done to show where balls go when they collide. The math says the OB departure will be around 30 degrees (or whatever it is) and then a real life halfball hit will mirror that.
CTE has the same perception errors as the rest... but I don't see a diagram or physics or video that makes sense to back it up. I haven't seen too many things that made me think "yeah, that makes sense on paper" ...and then my experience in the pool hall doesn't match it. I'd be very surprised if you could make a fake system that fools non-gullible players into thinking it's valid when they see it on paper.
Koop: noted, but do we have non-anecdotal evidence of this? Something that isn't just I-heard-from-a-friend? A link on the internet, a line in a book?