The "hypothetical" case is flawed -- especially with straight-in shots
See Sean the basic problem is that you want to twist my hypothetical.
John, please explain to me how I'm twisting your hypothetical? I clearly told you how I'd approach it. I'd start with straight-in shots, and make absolutely sure that the reason the player was missing the shots was not due to some underlying problems with fundamentals. Then, we'd go from there. I thought I made that clear?
First of all you are making this personal about ME and how I play and what I diagnose from my own game.
John, what you actually do has *everything* to do with what you're trying to say. Now, I don't take you as a person who says one thing, but does another. Are you?
If you're preaching all this hypothetical about "perfect form," but what you're seen doing in video doesn't jive with what you're trying to say, what am I supposed to come away with?
Mike Page incorrectly described the actions that I take to aim so he doesn't know what I am doing to end up lined up to the head ball. I said that I get better results with CTE and I do. That works for me.
If you get better results using CTE, that is specific to you, and only you. What Mike was asking you (and it was a question that I recall), is that how can you expect to get better results shooting a straight-in shot by aiming at something that's not dead-center of the object ball? If I recall correctly, it precisely pointed at [what I think] Mike was trying to get at -- and that is, are you *sure* using CTE on straight-in shots was not a placebo to get around something more fundamental, more basic -- i.e. your ability to perceive a straight line through the center of the ball?
(Mike, if you're reading this, please chime in and correct me if I'm wrong.) Thus far, the ONLY person who has answered to some reasonable semblance of a plausible answer is "peteypooldude," who responded that he'd rather not alter his pre-shot routine just for one type of shot. This is, at least, plausible. Yours escapes logical reason -- that you can get
better results on straight-in shots by *NOT* aiming straight through them!
Now, back to the hypothetical player/situation I proposed.
Let's take a REAL player. Steve Davis is a good one. What if I told Steve Davis that I was going to do an experiment and he was going to be your student.
I think we can agree that Steve's stance, stroke, delivery, etc.... are all as good as it gets.
What if I told Steve to line up perfectly 7 times and 3 times just enough off to rattle the ball?
How would you then improve Steve Davis' potting percentage to more than 70%.
John:
Ok, I'll bite. I'd do what I'd say I'd do -- take him through drills on straight-in shots, to remove any aiming "guestimation". (There is no "guestimation" with straight-in shots.) I'd watch for patterns in how he's missing the shot. I'd look for core issues with:
* his cue delivery (i.e. hooks, hitches, steering, jabbing and stopping, "lasso" stroke [poking at the cue ball and immediately pulling back as if getting ready to deliver the cue twice], etc.)
* any "jarring" motion I see in his body when delivering the cue (means he's off-balance somewhere)
* his stance (feet/knees/hips/elbow/shoulder aligned *on* the shot line)
* perception of center cue ball / center object ball (this one is big -- if you're not aiming center in the first place, you're not going to hit center)
* ...etc.
Now, I highlighted (in bold) something in your text above, which I think is the part you and I disagree on -- that "lining up perfectly" thing. On a straight-in shot (which is the crux of what we're talking about here, remember), lining up perfectly, is just that -- you're dead on the line through the center of the cue ball and through dead center of the object ball. It's just cue delivery, now. If my "student" were to then stroke that shot -- after I looked down his/her cue to make sure he/she were correctly on the line (I may even put a LaserStroke on his her cue to
verify the line of aim is correct -- which will "catch" the "intentional just a little bit off" thing), and he/she still missed the shot, can you not see that the problem was an execution problem? That something happened between this perfectly-lined up aim, and the subsequent delivery of the cue? So you're trying to imply that we don't address the root issue of why the cue was not delivered along that perfect line, and instead throw the baby out with the bath water and start with a new aiming system?
Let's assume for the sake of argument that you ran him through all of your analysis and you couldn't find one single thing wrong with his form.
So after all that he is still only making 7 out of 10 straight in shots.
What would your conclusion be if you didn't know that he was deliberately lining up just a hair off? What would your instruction to him be?
Let's say I did run him through the paces. Here's what I'd do:
1. Have him pot straight-in shots. And I mean DEAD straight-in shots, to remove any perception of ball-cutting. If he were having problems with potting straight-in shots,
I wouldn't move on to step 2. There's a problem here that needs to be addressed here in step 1, because it's core, root, fundamental. There is no guestimation (as pivot-based aiming advocates seem to like calling it that) with aiming straight-in shots vs cut shots. You aim center ball through both the cue ball and the object ball. You then deliver through on that line. If you miss, one of two things happened: a.) the shooter didn't properly perceive center ball in the first place, or b.) the shooter didn't deliver the cue straight through the shot line. Something happened in one of those two places, and I'd then attempt to diagnose where things went awry. I'd use tools like the LaserStroke to find out if it's a straight-line perception problem (which, again, will catch your "intentionally off by a hair" thing), or if somewhere in the cue delivery the cue went off the shot line. Again, there is no moving on to step 2 until we get straight-in shots nailed. I would say at this point, I would want my "student" to be nailing the center of the pocket on those straight-in shots 99% of the time. (Yes, I know and accept the fact that humans are not machines, not perfect, and sometimes the occasional hiccup happens.) But, you can't move on to step 2 if you can't aim center ball properly! (*That* is my point -- no twisting of your hypothetical at all.)
2. Let's say at this point, we're ready for cut-shots. The "student" has proven to me that he can for sure deliver his cue dead-center on the shot line 99% of the time. I'd have him then do cut-shots at known angles that are easy to aim at. For example -- the half-ball hit. I'd line up a series of half-ball hits for him to execute, at various places on the table, to be sure he's focusing on aiming at the edge of the object ball, and that he's following through to have the cue ball hit a true half-ball hit. What I'm looking for here, is "is he trying to steer the cue? Is he being distracted with, oh, say, the nearby rail and the thought of sending the object ball down that rail causes him to, say, steer the cue in the direction of the rail?" (I want to make sure the table itself isn't distracting him.) "Is he having problems with half-ball hits to one side [e.g. the left side]?" This could be a perception problem -- i.e. dominant eye, etc. From there, I'd move on to quarter-ball hits, three-quarter ball hits, two-thirds ball hits, etc.
But for sure, I would NOT throw the baby out with the bath water, and just "ignore" testing his fundamentals just because they "look good."
Is it going to be your final answer that it's impossible for a player to have perfect stroke, stance, delivery and not be able to line up to any shot perfectly all the time?
John, don't get me wrong -- I see what you're trying to get at. You want me to go down the road of visualizing a player who has perfect fundamentals, delivers his cue in a straight line, but somehow occasionally misses shots, therefore "needing" a new aiming system. The problem is that your hypothetical case -- most assuredly with this topic of straight-in shots -- is FLAWED. You can't have someone with "perfect" fundamentals who can't consistently pot straight-in shots ("consistently" meaning a reasonable margin of error -- noone's perfect). You can't have someone with "perfect" fundamentals who can't sight a straight-in shot properly (seeing and cueing-up on center cue ball *IS* a core aspect of proper fundamentals). And, you can't have someone with "perfect" fundamentals who properly sights-up center ball on both the cue ball and object ball, but then misses the shot.
(How can that person *then* be stated as having "perfect" fundamentals if he/she can't deliver the cue along that straight line he/she lined-up on? That was assuredly a cue delivery problem, therefore busting the myth this person had "perfect fundamentals" to begin with!) Your case, especially since it's intentionally skewed by you secretly telling Steve Davis to miss 30% of the time, blows up the perfect fundamentals theory, because Steve himself will tell you that the aiming through the center of both balls is a core fundamental in itself.
-Sean