I was watching this final from the 2015 American 14.1 tournament between Darren Appleton and Thorsten Hohmann (link below), and I found it somewhat amusing what happens to Darren from 57:00 to the end of the rack at 1:03:20. He got through it because, well, he's Darren Appleton, but it's interesting how a layout can be deceiving. From watching Darren's matches, I've admired how careful a player he is, rarely bumping balls he doesn't have to or going into balls without safety valves, and with an emphasis on taking care of problems as soon as possible.
Notice he already had a break shot with the 3-ball, so he didn't have to develop the 15-ball. The 7, 5, 2, 6, 15, 13 don't look like a cluster, but they are. Nothing really has an easy pocket. Playing the 7-ball up table after the 8 or 10 would have fixed it, but would you have seen it as a priority soon enough?
I love this friggin' game.
https://youtu.be/qYyMYI_gXdc?t=57m
Notice he already had a break shot with the 3-ball, so he didn't have to develop the 15-ball. The 7, 5, 2, 6, 15, 13 don't look like a cluster, but they are. Nothing really has an easy pocket. Playing the 7-ball up table after the 8 or 10 would have fixed it, but would you have seen it as a priority soon enough?
I love this friggin' game.
https://youtu.be/qYyMYI_gXdc?t=57m