drivermaker said:
These layouts are hard to determine on a screen because you don't know if the angle or distance between balls was set up correctly.
From the way it looks, maybe the way you played it was to cut the 1, putting just a little spin on the CB to carom off the 3 to get position on the 2 and either nudging the 3 to the long rail or whacking it a little harder so it banked one rail to be played in the corner on the same side as the 4. I never can tell from these Wei table thingies and could be way off base. So....what did you do?
ok, the angle is hard to see on the wei table. you couldn't draw back, or nudge the 3 ball.
you could play safe on the one, that was my first thought. but then i saw another shot. you just jack up a little, make the one, and jump over the 3 ball. this brings you down past the 9 for good shape on the 2.
from the 2, i used about half a tip of high running spin. i wanted to come more than halfway up the table, but i come up short a little past center table.
the first time i played the 3, i spun it in with low outside spin and tried to hold it for the four, didn't work out, and hand to play safe.
when i practiced it, i used the 6 ball to slow the cue down. i used follow on the 3 bumped the 6 and got almost straight in on the 4 down in the corner under the 5.......from there, it was pretty much routine.
at the time, i was shooting with a very well known pro, and we took turns shooting the 3 to the 4 ball shot.
we both ended up like either shooting the 3 with alot of low outside and holding the cue, or bumping the 6.
everytime we tried hitting the 4 or the 8 we ended up playing safe.
DM is right.......the angles are very hard to determine ont the wei table. but the only way to get on the two was to JUMP over the three.
thanks
VAP