yeah, I agree with this (you).
I liked his statistics, and I think he is correct.
Hay; btw, I don't know if you're gonna be playing down your way or up my way but you are aware of " the those two " tables up at Top Hat right?
yeah, I agree with this (you).
I liked his statistics, and I think he is correct.
try him on the tighter table and see if its better for you
you already are losing on big pockets
Sometimes the most correctest answer is the simplest.
Good call.
I heard the only 2pac you got in in your cassette player.Oh yeah; well....., I'm a monster on a valley with 6 inch pockets. I have MULTIPLE 2 packs on that table!!!!
Logic error. Your situation's specific- he only out shot you- does not apply to situations where the "better than" includes moving skill.
If your talking 4 1/2 vs 5" it's not going to make much difference. Now if your talking 4 1/8 I prefer to play better players on the tight table. I've played plenty of very top players and I would never ever ever play them on a 5" table. I played Efren twice on a 5" bucket and he never missed and I didn't win one game. The third time I played Efren I got him on an 4 1/8" pocket and it was a completely different game and outcome.
The way I look at it is than they will never miss on 5" buckets but I will. At 4 1/8" they become human and still shoot at almost everything. When they miss they will easier shots for me. Of course I regularly play on 4 1/8 and miss plenty but I'm more comfortable playing on them against good players
They both know 14 or more moves, don't they?Hey I know you can play but... you saying efren:thumbup:
My personal experience, from occasionally having given up spots like 13-5 and 12-6, is that the weaker player should prefer the looser table. On the easier equipment the weaker player will run and score more balls.
Lou Figueroa
the guy spotting- spots the number of balls over 15 after the innings he makes them.
My personal experience, from occasionally having given up spots like 13-5 and 12-6, is that the weaker player should prefer the looser table. On the easier equipment the weaker player will run and score more balls.
Lou Figueroa
Example: 13-5 is 18balls,right? Thats 2 over 16,right? So, i would have to spot 2balls then go to 11. Got it? 12-6 i'd spot 2 and go to 10. You spot the number of balls over 16. BTW, Ronnie Allen used to play guys 21-3, one-handed jacked-up. He's have to spot 8 then go to 13. Get ya some of that!!!I'm not a one pocket player and have a question about the spot.
How does 13-5 or 12-6 work? How do you play a game where the combined scores equal more than the 15 balls on the table? What happens when it's 11-4 and you're out of balls?
JC
Example: 13-5 is 18balls,right? Thats 2 over 16,right? So, i would have to spot 2balls then go to 11. Got it? 12-6 i'd spot 2 and go to 10. You spot the number of balls over 16. BTW, Ronnie Allen used to play guys 21-3, one-handed jacked-up. He's have to spot 8 then go to 13. Get ya some of that!!!
Over 16, not fifteen. An even game is 8 to 8 or 16 total. Player upping the weight has to spot the number of balls over 16. If spot adds-up to 16 or less there is no ball spotting. Ex, 9-6 or 11-5- no spotting.the guy spotting- spots the number of balls over 15 after the innings he makes them.
16 of course typo error.
Example: 13-5 is 18balls,right? Thats 2 over 16,right? So, i would have to spot 2balls then go to 11. Got it? 12-6 i'd spot 2 and go to 10. You spot the number of balls over 16. BTW, Ronnie Allen used to play guys 21-3, one-handed jacked-up. He's have to spot 8 then go to 13. Get ya some of that!!!
If your talking 4 1/2 vs 5" it's not going to make much difference. ...
Ronnie Allen used to play guys 21-3, He's have to spot 8 then go to 13. Get ya some of that!!!