Sean:
Thank you for your thoughtful comments.
I met with some About.com Guides about a month ago in person, including a leading opthalmologist, the writer of over 30 books, and some top businesspeople and marketing and entertainment talent. Many of our readers are equally articulate.
Yes, there are many content mills online where the stupidest articles imaginable, like the one you mentioned, are churned out to draw ad revenue. That's not About at all. We go for quality of content and not grabbing SEO terms.
Also, and as demonstrated by readers' posts here at AZ, it's untrue that my site is for babies while the grownups are here. There are lurkers at both sites and strong intellectuals at both, like anywhere else. The nature of most any forum is that some small number of dedicated posters do a lot of threads while About in sheer, vast numbers alone has thousands of excellent pool shooters reading it, even if you insist most are "babies", which they are not. I get e-mails constantly from strong players who want to ask questions or debate a point.
PS. You are discounting my articles (and the very thread you're citing at AZ!) where I've explained, patiently, (sigh) how some top players consciously aim at the contact point while subconciously going for the ghost ball and/or otherwise adjusting for CIT, etc.
We both know contact point aim undercuts balls. I've said so at my site and it's on my Aim Primer, which inspired the latest debate.
Shari Stauch has a diagram in
Pool Player's Edge showing contact point undercut, and her teaching is always sound--don't misunderstand me--we discussed
Edge when we spoke in Atlanta--but it is she who collated pro comments in her
famous article polling pro aim that shows a plurality of pros aim right at the contact point.
The argument could be, "Contact point undercuts--it's a fact!" yet it should be "Then why do so many strong players aim at the contact point?"
I'll go with the geometry of a Patrick Johnson (yes, I said that despite the need for an Internet restraining order) or a Dr. Alciatore any day, and would insist the player is merely making an unconscious adjustment if they disagree.
But why can AZ readers admit ghost ball players can adjust aim for CIT, Sean, but cannot admit contact players adjust to score balls? They can and do. I don't get it.