Patrick Johnson said:I agree with this. The 2 is the natural keyball, either in the side or either bottom corner, and a stop shot on it is highly preferable. The 7-1-3 is the most reliable route to a stop shot on the 2, which means it goes in the left corner.
pj
chgo
I'm saying it can't be done this way, but do you realize you played every single shot by going across your position zone. Further, you played position on a single ball on every shot. That's a certain way to end up in a bad position somewhere along the way...I know from experience.RiverCity said:
2-7-3-1-8
No sidespin or draw, a little follow here and there is all that is needed. Does require speed control though.
Chuck
SoundWaves said:OK here is the situation your hill/hill playing 8 ball and you are low balls. Your opponent has scratched and you have ball in hand. Wait a minute your not playing It's your team mate and he is going about this the wrong way. Time out! You show the player the easiest out with little cue ball movement and all natural angles.... Then you loose.... LOL can't shoot the balls for them.. The reason for my post is that when this situation occurred I had two other players that I thought I respected their opinions completely disagree with my pattern. So I guess my question is two fold, how would you get out from here and if you where coaching someone around an APA 4 speed would it change your pattern? Looks like an easy out to me, but I never miss from my stool.
jsp said:IMO, using the 2 as the key ball is a horrible choice for a novice. Not only is it a fairly long shot to the bottom-left corner, you have to be perfectly straight-in on the shot. If you have any sort of angle, then you're hosed. Too much to expect for a novice.
IMO, using the 2 as the key ball is a horrible choice for a novice. Not only is it a fairly long shot to the bottom-left corner, you have to be perfectly straight-in on the shot. If you have any sort of angle, then you're hosed. Too much to expect for a novice.
I consider yours the second worst choice...the worst being the big dipper outline. If the player is weak, they will probably over hit the 7 and be on the side rail leaving a blind pocket shot on the 1. The CB travels away from any natural line for shot on next ball. If by chance they are lucky enough to land on the 1 and pot that long shot, they could leave bad shape on the 3. If they finish too far int he middle of the table for the 2 they have another long shot. this time the 2 being cut down rail with a scratch in side. take the shortest shape and shot route. I see too many possible worst case in this pattern. Every shot can end badly with shape or even miss these half table pots.Patrick Johnson said:You're not hosed with any sort of angle or even with most angles. Anything up to a substantial angle (especially shooting toward the rail) still stops in the general vicinity of the side pocket if the novice doesn't hit it too hard. Even shooting away from the rail the CB either stops short enough or goes past the 8, giving almost as good a chance at shape as other routes to the 8. Furthermore, getting straight in on the 2 (or nearly so) is a simple matter of stunning the shot on the 3. Every other kind of shape on the 8 is more complicated, and every other path to the keyball is way more complicated - this one involves only moderate-speed stun shots and simple follow, with no spin at all.
I stand by the choice of the 2 as the keyball, and by the choice of paths to it. If we had several APA 4s shoot both ways (with instruction about which shots to stop and which one to roll) I'd be willing to bet my way would see the most successes because each part of it is the simplest kind of shot with the most room for error. The only real assumption is that the APA 4s can shoot easy stop shots.
My 3 cents.
pj
chgo
Jason Robichaud said:I consider yours the second worst choice...the worst being the big dipper outline. If the player is weak, they will probably over hit the 7 and be on the side rail leaving a blind pocket shot on the 1. The CB travels away from any natural line for shot on next ball. If by chance they are lucky enough to land on the 1 and pot that long shot, they could leave bad shape on the 3. If they finish too far int he middle of the table for the 2 they have another long shot. this time the 2 being cut down rail with a scratch in side. take the shortest shape and shot route. I see too many possible worst case in this pattern. Every shot can end badly with shape or even miss these half table pots.
Yeah, me too. My opinions are that of your basic banger that mostly loses.cubswin said:Just the way I'd play it if I was shooting. I'm not a genius, by any means. Just your basic ball banger that sometimes wins. Not being all that good to begin with, I still have no doubt I'd play it that way and get out.
softshot said:Mid level players given BIH should IMO shoot the hardest ball to get position on first and in this case that would be the 3 frozen or nearly frozen to the top rail.
I see it 3,2,7,1,8