played for 2 years in high school, around 1965-67, maybe a couple times a week, high run was 29. then went away to school and got busy with a wife and a career and forgot all about it.
40 years later [!] i woke up one day and said to mysefl "pool. what ever happened to pool? i used to Like to play pool". i know guys say all the time "oh, i haven't played in blah, blah" but i Really didn't play for over 40 years. so i went out and bought a stick and started playing again. that was 5.5 years ago, summer of 2009. i played Terribly!
fortunately, one of the first things i stumbled across in trying to learn more was a video of Blackjack commenting a run by Thorsten. i was stunned by all that was going on, and absorbed everything i could and scoured the net for more videos and watched them incessantly. but my fundamentals sucked So bad, i couldn't execute anything anyway.
then 2 years ago, Steve Matthieu (sparkle84 here) started posting on AZ, and eventually suggested we meet up. he tore apart what i *thought* i knew pretty quickly, and began teaching me how to open up the balls earlier, get on problems Right Now, not 4 balls later, and a bunch of position advice. i eventually croaked out a 42, but it wasn't pretty, and wasn't reliable, because my stroke was still a poke. for the next 18 months, i hardly broke 24, and often had whole nights of running single digits.
over the past 2 years, though, i slowly worked on the fundamentals, and this year after reading Mark Wilson's Play Great Pool, i realized some things that were really broken and set out to fix them. i also did that drill that Tor Lowry talks about in his video, where you shoot 2000 balls (no joke, it takes a Long time, over a week) straight into the pocket, forget cue ball and object ball, just stroke the ball straight in. after that, though, by doing some video of my stance, etc, i realized the conventional stance in Mark's book just didn't work for me, and changed to a much more open, almost snooker stance, which straightened my stroke considerably.
at that point, last October, my game jumped suddenly and i was running a string of 28's, but still conking out on putting racks together. then after some advice from Dan White here, i worked Much harder than i ever had before on position accuracy, and suddenly my game jumped another couple of notches, and in November i ran a 52.
since then, it's been one step backwards, 1.5 steps forward, and then when Steve M was here again a little while ago, he showed me how much focus i Didn't have, which was an eye opener. but things are gelling. i'm finally at the stage he thought i'd reach 2 years ago, where i'm starting to run 30's pretty often (had another 35 tonight, and in only 14 minutes, much faster than previous), and the occasional 40.
[here's tonight's run:
http://youtu.be/7ime4AA2KlE]
so my game is still getting steadily better, in terms of fundamentals and knowledge and patterns, and Especially my position accuracy, and i think in a few years there's an outside chance that i could become the oldest guy ever to run 100 for the first time; i'm now 66 and i'm in great shape: i look more like someone in their late 40's with prematurely white hair.
but i'm not hung up on that number, and i'm pretty happy right now with how i've progressed in the past 6 months, and not pushing it, just taking my time and having fun and trying to do it right. i'll be pretty happy if i'm a geezer who can crank out the occasional 60-something and scare the young folks!