Fundamentals - Stepping Into The Shot

Pidge

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
One of the most unused practices in pool in my opinion. Not many do it, at least not at the right time. Its something that should be done once your line of aim is locked in. You step forward with what would be your back foot when down, then place the other leg whilst at the same time bending at the hips.

I see lots of players doing it badly though. Its only a little one foot step forward but it causes some players lots of problems. The main one being their head and especially their vision centre moves off the line of aim as they place their feet. It causes you to have to aim the shot again as you're getting down.

A clever little training device Nic Barrow uses is a mirror. You need a tall mirror, sheets of paper and some sticky tape. Tape the paper onto the mirror so in the middle of the mirror from top to bottom there is a strip of reflective mirror showing...about 3 or 4 inches wide. Set up a straight in and place the mirror directly behind the pocket you want the pot into and the strip should be aligned with the pot. Now you simply stand back, step in, get down and all the time looking into the mirror to make sure you can always see all of your head in the mirror. Even if you don't want to step in (it may not be for everyone) its a good tool to use to make sure you're bending down correctly and your head isn't moving off the line of aim. Once you find how to get down with your head always visible, now check to see if your grip hand is always visible. Next you want to check if your bridge hand makes an appearance around about the time you place the last foot. The sooner the bridge gets onto the line of aim the better.

You can then move onto angled shots replicating getting down as you did on the straight ins. Pots into blind pockets will become no bigger problem than any other shot. You shouldn't have to move your bridge or grip hand about when down because you should be aligned correctly to start with. All this by simply not coming into the shot at an angle...amazing, eh?

When I'm down the snooker club and I'm watching people play pool and snooker I can instantly tell the players that can score the 70+ breaks, the players that have no issue running racks simply by how they approach the shot. If a players stays completely on the line of aim they can play. The pros make it look effortless, but for us regular people we might make it look awkward at first, but a bit of practice and it should begin to come effortless.
 
I like Mika's style of stepping into the shot the best.
Mika doesn't step in in the traditional way. His back foot is planted, he aims, steps out with his left leg steps back a little with his back leg. I wouldn't advise anyone to do it this way, although you cant argue at the success Mika has had doing it.

The whole notion of stepping in is to get you standing back away from the table to give you a better view and to have the entire body moving forward, and not back. The only part of the body that should move back is the grip hand.
 
Mika doesn't step in in the traditional way. His back foot is planted, he aims, steps out with his left leg steps back a little with his back leg. I wouldn't advise anyone to do it this way, although you cant argue at the success Mika has had doing it.

The whole notion of stepping in is to get you standing back away from the table to give you a better view and to have the entire body moving forward, and not back. The only part of the body that should move back is the grip hand.

Can you post some video of this 3 step procedure you think Mika does?

I have never seen it.

His process is pretty consistent and he takes a final view of the shot head & stick online with feet and body in place. From there he simply drops in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhUdPz3IN_8
 
Can you post some video of this 3 step procedure you think Mika does?

I have never seen it.

His process is pretty consistent and he takes a final view of the shot head & stick online with feet and body in place. From there he simply drops in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhUdPz3IN_8
There's a video on youtube of Mika vs Daz in straight pool. I'd post a link but it would be to the mobile version...not sure how that would play on a computer. Anyway, in that video you see his footwork fairly clear at one point. As he braces his right leg his right foot slides back. He doesn't do it on all shots from what I can see, but he does it on the majority. It may be that he is just too close to the white ball and he adjusts when down. At no point did I see Mika step forward into the shot in the traditional sense.

When you watch someone like Neil Robertson play he approaches the shot pretty textbook.
 
One of the most unused practices in pool in my opinion. Not many do it, at least not at the right time. Its something that should be done once your line of aim is locked in. You step forward with what would be your back foot when down, then place the other leg whilst at the same time bending at the hips.

I see lots of players doing it badly though. Its only a little one foot step forward but it causes some players lots of problems. The main one being their head and especially their vision centre moves off the line of aim as they place their feet. It causes you to have to aim the shot again as you're getting down.

A clever little training device Nic Barrow uses is a mirror. You need a tall mirror, sheets of paper and some sticky tape. Tape the paper onto the mirror so in the middle of the mirror from top to bottom there is a strip of reflective mirror showing...about 3 or 4 inches wide. Set up a straight in and place the mirror directly behind the pocket you want the pot into and the strip should be aligned with the pot. Now you simply stand back, step in, get down and all the time looking into the mirror to make sure you can always see all of your head in the mirror. Even if you don't want to step in (it may not be for everyone) its a good tool to use to make sure you're bending down correctly and your head isn't moving off the line of aim. Once you find how to get down with your head always visible, now check to see if your grip hand is always visible. Next you want to check if your bridge hand makes an appearance around about the time you place the last foot. The sooner the bridge gets onto the line of aim the better.

You can then move onto angled shots replicating getting down as you did on the straight ins. Pots into blind pockets will become no bigger problem than any other shot. You shouldn't have to move your bridge or grip hand about when down because you should be aligned correctly to start with. All this by simply not coming into the shot at an angle...amazing, eh?

When I'm down the snooker club and I'm watching people play pool and snooker I can instantly tell the players that can score the 70+ breaks, the players that have no issue running racks simply by how they approach the shot. If a players stays completely on the line of aim they can play. The pros make it look effortless, but for us regular people we might make it look awkward at first, but a bit of practice and it should begin to come effortless.

Hello Pidge, thanks for the info but i cannot really picture how do u paste the paper on the mirror , and on which positiom and how is it used to align my cueing action ?

Could u perhaps post pictures or sketch of how its done as i have a mirror and a home table which i wld like to try it out ?

Thanks
Ryan
 
Hello Pidge, thanks for the info but i cannot really picture how do u paste the paper on the mirror , and on which positiom and how is it used to align my cueing action ?

Could u perhaps post pictures or sketch of how its done as i have a mirror and a home table which i wld like to try it out ?

Thanks
Ryan
Here is a link to Nic Barrow coaching a player on shot approach using a mirror.

http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=8wafKOsa8-M

Its towards the end of the video the mirror makes an appearance if I remember. If the link doesn't work search YouTube for "Nic Barrow Snooker Coaching Dartfish Analysis Francesco Shot Approach".

Enjoy.
 
I guess we see things different. Mika is the first player I think of when you talk about players who step in to every shot.
Niels Feijen is also very consistent although he`s got a very different stroke compared to Mika.
 
Yeah, you may see stepping in to the shot as just that - a step. Where I'm from stepping into the shot means with both feet. A better term may be walking into the shot. Either way, I believe its better to stand back from the table and do all the figuring out there then 'walk' into the shot whilst getting down in a controlled fluent motion.
 
Yeah, you may see stepping in to the shot as just that - a step. Where I'm from stepping into the shot means with both feet. A better term may be walking into the shot. Either way, I believe its better to stand back from the table and do all the figuring out there then 'walk' into the shot whilst getting down in a controlled fluent motion.

That`s just what I mean.
You need to do all the thinking before getting down. Walking into the shot at the right angle is crucial.
 
Was talking to a friend over the weekend. He recently received lessons from a snooker player. One of the main things they worked on was PSR. According the him they were playing on pockets smaller than 4". They asked him if he was left or right eye dominant. He said I am left ear dominant. He was do his PSR by stepping into the shot. Turn his head so now he was looking away from the shot. Shoot without looking. He said the guy was running racks on a 9ft with under 4" pockets without looking at the shot. Just by coming into the shot lined up. We live in Maryland. Not sure where he found a snooker player.
 
Was talking to a friend over the weekend. He recently received lessons from a snooker player. One of the main things they worked on was PSR. According the him they were playing on pockets smaller than 4". They asked him if he was left or right eye dominant. He said I am left ear dominant. He was do his PSR by stepping into the shot. Turn his head so now he was looking away from the shot. Shoot without looking. He said the guy was running racks on a 9ft with under 4" pockets without looking at the shot. Just by coming into the shot lined up. We live in Maryland. Not sure where he found a snooker player.
That's how important stepping in on the right line is. You shouldn't need to rely on the eyes too much. As you get older and the eyes start to go a little it becomes more vital. That's very impressive if he was running racks not looking, regardless of pocket size.
 
I wouldn't advise anyone to do it this way,

Master giver of advice, what would you advise then? You seem to forget a few things Pidge. Number one, you aren't capable of knowing what is or isn't proper advice to give. Number two, getting down into the shot line varies due to body type. All that matters is consistency when you do get down and into a shot. Consistency. Not the idea that there's only one way to set down into a shot.
 
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I try to be very careful about staying on my shot line when I step in, I can not say this is making me a better pool player but I still do it all the same. If there is enough room around the table I like to back away a step or 2 from the table when viewing the shot, some bars don't have enough room around the table to do this on all sides though. I played at a tournament over the weekend and there was less than a 58" cue between the tables, not much room to zero in on shot line very well.
 
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