I never mind giving advice. "Just give it a good hard whack, that always works for me."
Hu
Hu
If you can drive a car, you got it.I guess you are saying the same thing as straightline above. I am not yet at a point where I can recognize patterns quickly. I hope to get there someday....
Anger and pool do not mix well. Back in my 20s when we were not at the pool hall, all us regulars were at a house party.. was always one or the other.I've personally caused one very good player to break his brand new stick that he had just bragged about buying for $3500. It was his birthday and was a present to himself. I felt bad about that but I honestly played him fair and square. I've also beat a decent player and 2 minutes later saw him outside in the smoking area punching the side of the building until his knuckles were bloody. I never said one word to either of them before or after their little hissy fits and never mentioned the event to them after the fact. Just hit them with a constricting play style that tightens up the more they struggle.
I believe all Gorst is doing is getting a better idea where all the balls are. So when he gets down on the shot he has a better sense of the 3-D layout or depth perception/relationship of the balls and pockets so he can more precisely line up his shot.From what I understand there is a difference between looking and seeing.
I thought the OP was going to discuss something to the effect that "looking" is when you look at the whole object ball and "seeing" is when you identify the micro-dot (as Mark Wilson calls it) where you want to hit.
My interest is how do you identify that micro-dot even at an amateur level? I often see Gorst standing behind the OB and looking at the line to the pocket. I figure he is looking for the micro-dot, but he would walk back to the cue ball without keeping his eyes on the OB, so I am not sure how he is able to mark that dot. If this is something someone can explain, I would be very grateful.
Is this bit of black magic, a distillation of other players' or original with you. And is it a new secret spell?I believe I explained: once you have chosen the object ball and the pocket then cue ball path and spot position, the answers to all of your questions follow automatically: can be deduced with exactness precisely. But my concept of Ultimate SEEING and Execution will show/explain a process or technique or step by step mental "tool" that gets results guaranteed. The "micro-dot" will be revealed.
You know there's a quality vs quantity component as well."using the understanding gained by major thinkers who have gone before in order to make intellectual progress". Wikipedia
Do communists like to eat crow?
Missing because of fatigue may or may not be your own fault.<snip>
I am surprised no one mentioned fatigue. You get tired, you lose.
Many a pool player lost their money because they didn't know when to quit.
Lastly, this might explain the previous point and this is the hardest one to swallow: Forrest Gump said it best, "Stupid is as stupid does."
If everything about pool is known and if all the information is available either for free or paid then why the struggle?
Why is there a Fedor, Joshua, Shane, Eklent, Carlo, etc.?
I gather that experts have all the answers.
So, any experts have excuses, oh, excuse me.
Any "reasons" to explain?
Any suggestions how to get any one here on that list?
Like I said, knowing what to do is not doing.
In the end, making the shot is about execution/performance.
I am sure all would agree that the pros use a process.
Repeatable and consistent to the highest degree humanly possible.
I guess any exact precise process is not known except among the "upper echelon" players.
There we go: secrets these processes obviously must be.
Assuming you have at least natural or correctable 20/20 vision so you can focus easily on the balls and table,
what are you looking at yet failing to SEE or imagine then visualize?
Is your brain not wired properly because of trauma, drug abuse, poor diet, lack of exercise, etc.
Are any of your senses not up to par, such as balance?
If you are within generally acceptable pool condition, you can be taught and efficiently learn and perform at a very high level.
It is not because of not enough practice.
You could say it is not enough good practice or the right practice.
These are generalities that offers nothing else.
So again, why are there not any AZBilliards forum members on this list that I am aware of?
This is what it is:
It is not practicing efficiently using the Ultimate SEEING and Execution techniques/tools/process on all aspects of your game at all times.
This is mildly intensive work requiring focus and paying the closest attention to detail.
You will have all the skills necessary to do this.
"paying the closest attention to detail" is a generality, as well, unless you have the techniques to make this happen.
I mentioned that some say you do not need an instructor. I would agree but their may be exceptions I can't think of.
Here is why:
Why do you need an instructor to tell you what he sees as your pool problems?
You can already see what they are for yourself.
If you can't then this is your problem:
You cannot see what you yourself are doing?
I find this hard to believe.
You can see your pool problems but don't know how to correct them?
Most if not all of your fundamental pool problems and their solutions are well documented on YouTube or on websites online for free.
But it is your choice to seek the aide of an instructor.
So, you keep repeating the phrase, term, title, whatever: Ultimate SEEING and Execution (the capitalization of seeing is a new wrinkle, lol).
You've exceeded the usual level of ballyhoo here for a new thingie. Whatyagot?
Lou Figueroa
just spit it out, man
Sometimes I can shoot as straight as anyone, stroke as good as anyone, run balls as good as anyone. The game is 90% mental once you have the basics and knowledge but that's my weakness. Focus and attention is very difficult. I can do it for about 3 racks then my head is toast. It may jump back in the game after a couple racks, but the pros are mentally strong. They can sustain focus for hours and hours.If everything about pool is known and if all the information is available either for free or paid then why the struggle?
Why is there a Fedor, Joshua, Shane, Eklent, Carlo, etc.?
Why are there not any AZBilliards forum members on this list as far as I know?
I gather that experts have all the answers.
So, any experts have excuses, oh, excuse me.
Any "reasons" to explain?
Any suggestions how to get any one here on that list?
Like I said, knowing what to do is not doing.
In the end, making the shot is about execution/performance.
I am sure all would agree that the pros use a process.
Repeatable and consistent to the highest degree humanly possible.
I guess any exact precise process is not known except among the "upper echelon" players.
There we go: secrets these processes obviously must be.
Assuming you have at least natural or correctable 20/20 vision so you can focus easily on the balls and table,
what are you looking at yet failing to SEE or imagine then visualize?
Is your brain not wired properly because of trauma, drug abuse, poor diet, lack of exercise, etc.
Are any of your senses not up to par, such as balance?
If you are within generally acceptable pool condition, you can be taught and efficiently learn and perform at a very high level.
It is not because of not enough practice.
You could say it is not enough good practice or the right practice.
These are generalities that offers nothing else.
So again, why are there not any AZBilliards forum members on this list that I am aware of?
This is what it is:
It is not practicing efficiently using the Ultimate SEEING and Execution techniques/tools/process on all aspects of your game at all times.
This is mildly intensive work requiring focus and paying the closest attention to detail.
You will have all the skills necessary to do this.
"paying the closest attention to detail" is a generality, as well, unless you have the techniques to make this happen.
I mentioned that some say you do not need an instructor. I would agree but their may be exceptions I can't think of.
Here is why:
Why do you need an instructor to tell you what he sees as your pool problems?
You can already see what they are for yourself.
If you can't then this is your problem:
You cannot see what you yourself are doing?
I find this hard to believe.
You can see your pool problems but don't know how to correct them?
Most if not all of your fundamental pool problems and their solutions are well documented on YouTube or on websites online for free.
But it is your choice to seek the aide of an instructor.
I'd like to hear more about this! If you watch a chicken's head it is dead level most times, even when moving. I think keeping your eyes level, even with fatigue and body wear and tear is of the utmost importance. I've talked about this before, there are even videos using a chicken as a steady cam.chicken vision aiming method!
I'd like to hear more about this! If you watch a chicken's head it is dead level most times, even when moving. I think keeping your eyes level, even with fatigue and body wear and tear is of the utmost importance. I've talked about this before, there are even videos using a chicken as a steady cam.
At Hard Times Bellflower there was a house pro, Dave Hemmah. Al "Little Al" Romero had his cue shop up stairs. He told me Dave has beaten several top pros. I believe local Tang Ho has as well. I am aware that there are some very good players that at any given place and time can occasionally beat a name player. This is why I said, "Why are there not any AZBilliards forum members on this list as far as I know?" As far as I know. Speaking of Little Al, over the years I would mention occasionally, only to him, that I thought Cole was better than Efren. He would never agree. I was coming from the point of view that in his prime, Cole was so good, he could play anyone heads up 9-ball and stood at minimum an even chance of winning, where even the rolls could make the difference. Now, Little Al also knew what he was talking about. He told me that he didn't start to get real good until he was about 40 years old. He was in such demand that he would get phone calls to get on a plane to fly to Texas. Not because he was a fish/loser but because he had a reputation on having a willingness to play anybody anywhere anytime for any amount (my assumption.) Someone, probably a backer, had set up a match and the game was on. He told me he had played Cole and that Cole took a little bit of money from him. That's testimony of how good Little Al's game was and that he wisely knew better than to keep playing what proved to be a risky bet or not worth the hassle. I had told Little Al that the reason I thought Cole edged out Efren in my estimation was because of his powerful stroke and his command of that powerful stroke. About a year before the CoVid lock down when Hard Times Bellflower was still in business Little Al and I were sitting together in the stands looking down on table #6. I believe Efren was playing. Little Al leaned over and softly said that he agreed that Cole had been better. Now I am assuming he meant that overall, in 9-ball, in his prime, Cole edged Efren as I had believed. It wasn't a "win" for my contention, it was just a thing. Little Al probably wouldn't even remember it.Maybe because most of us here choose to work a regular job, have a place to live, a family life, and make pool a fun avocation.
And even in our mediocrity some of us have defeated Open championship players like SVB and Nevel in competition ;-)
Lou Figueroa
I'm sure there
are many more
examples