The next time you practice, consider trying something a bit different. Here are some ideas:
1) Play for all behind-the-rack breakshots
2) Play for all side pocket breakshots (where the break ball is close to the rack, not the pocket). Then do the other kind of side pocket break.
3) Play a game where all you do is blast the breakshots open. Then reverse it and play a game where you are trying to fairly softly only disturb a subsection of the rack on a breakshot.
Also, mix it up by changing your usual key balls for these shots. You can do this even when you go back to traditional side-of-the-rack breakshots. Play a whole day where you look for this end pattern (3-8-5-1):
Then play another whole day where you only look for this one (3-8-1):
And another day where you look for this one (11-8-3-1):
Play another day where you are only allowed to use a break shot if it was manufactured during the rack.
Play another day where you try to shoot at least 4 balls of every rack into one of the upper pockets. It doesn't matter if you have to do something awkward to make that happen - that is not the point of all this.
As you can guess, the idea is to flex your mind in how it thinks about straight pool. You may very well have preconceived notions about the game which are not accurate (we all do); continuing to do the same things over and over again will do nothing to dispel these errors. Exercising your thought patterns may open new possibilities to you, or even just change your ideas on percentages of certain outs.
- Steve
1) Play for all behind-the-rack breakshots
2) Play for all side pocket breakshots (where the break ball is close to the rack, not the pocket). Then do the other kind of side pocket break.
3) Play a game where all you do is blast the breakshots open. Then reverse it and play a game where you are trying to fairly softly only disturb a subsection of the rack on a breakshot.
Also, mix it up by changing your usual key balls for these shots. You can do this even when you go back to traditional side-of-the-rack breakshots. Play a whole day where you look for this end pattern (3-8-5-1):
Then play another whole day where you only look for this one (3-8-1):
And another day where you look for this one (11-8-3-1):
Play another day where you are only allowed to use a break shot if it was manufactured during the rack.
Play another day where you try to shoot at least 4 balls of every rack into one of the upper pockets. It doesn't matter if you have to do something awkward to make that happen - that is not the point of all this.
As you can guess, the idea is to flex your mind in how it thinks about straight pool. You may very well have preconceived notions about the game which are not accurate (we all do); continuing to do the same things over and over again will do nothing to dispel these errors. Exercising your thought patterns may open new possibilities to you, or even just change your ideas on percentages of certain outs.
- Steve