Some people think playing is practicing, IMHO it is not. Practicing what you do poor, and working to improve it practicing. Can not draw Cue Ball, that is something to practice.
ive been playing 18 years and still feel the same way you do sometimes. My local pool hall, the only one within an hour of me, closed down several years ago, and my pool playing has taken a hit. I practiced several nights a week there, and now my only option is crappy bar tables. Im working on getting a home with my own table. I dont think you ever stop learning in this game, and the ups and downs almost keep you going back for more. It helps to know someone equal to or a bit better than you, who can point out things that you are doing that you may not notice. For example, a decent player told me i hold my bridge hand too far from the cueball and have too long of a bridge. This will introduce more cue swaying and error. So i need to try a shorter bridge and stroke.I have been playing for 3.5 years. Just play at home, practicing, haven’t played anyone in months. I do some drills, always trying to get position, trying to make the layout easy. Trying to get near my next ball. Always with position in mind. Use CTE for aiming, and my half ball hits or 30 degree shots are not my problem. I can run a lot more racks, but I’m always one or two balls away from position. Does this come with time?????? I can put the time in, as i love to play practice. Was going to make tonight my first major 9 ball tournament, but after watching the asian gentleman play, I’m not ready. If I can’t clear the table 9 time out of 10 with throwing 9 balls and spreading them out, I’m not ready.
Am i asking too much of myself???????/
I have been playing for 3.5 years. Just play at home, practicing, haven’t played anyone in months. I do some drills, always trying to get position, trying to make the layout easy. Trying to get near my next ball. Always with position in mind. Use CTE for aiming, and my half ball hits or 30 degree shots are not my problem. I can run a lot more racks, but I’m always one or two balls away from position. Does this come with time?????? I can put the time in, as i love to play practice. Was going to make tonight my first major 9 ball tournament, but after watching the asian gentleman play, I’m not ready. If I can’t clear the table 9 time out of 10 with throwing 9 balls and spreading them out, I’m not ready.
Am i asking too much of myself???????/
Exactly! And almost no one wants to practice, they want to play. You might see a particular troublesome shot once every 2 racks, if your pattern play is on point, you might be able to avoid it more than that. But if you set it up and shoot it a dozen times a day for a week it won't be a problem shot much longer. The next time you see it you can deal with it, maybe even be able to play position on it to connect the rest of the run.Some people think playing is practicing, IMHO it is not. Practicing what you do poor, and working to improve it practicing. Can not draw Cue Ball, that is something to practice.
F1 drivers need some mysterious advanced physiology; well into genetic exclusivity. Eric Clapton - not so much. I think much of this argument is comparing giants with veterans only a few hours into their training and perhaps even less times actually advancing.As is the case in any human endeavor you either got it or you don't. Future Formula 1 drivers are identified before they're 12 years old. Just because you own a guitar doesn't mean you're ever going to be Eric Clapton. Talent trumps everything. If your blind in one eye and can't see out of the other you're never going to beat Filler no mater how much you practice.
You started pool very late...and you're 65. You are probably asking way too much of yourself...but sounds like you play pretty good! You might be past the "running racks" phase of life. And that is ok. Take up ONE POCKET. It's the best game anyway! Get out of the house....find a pool room with competition and go COMPETE. My probably growing up was I never practiced...from early on I just got right into action and learned as I competed...from experience, victory and lots of defeat...with a little practice on the side. Pool is not a solo sport. You might get to where you can break and run or beat the ghost at home, alone....then the first time you get into a real match you dog your damn brains out and forget how to play. You need to get into battle. Best of luck!Thanks for all of the good advice guys. Maybe jack nicholson said it best for me:
MAYBE THIS IS AS GOOD AS IT GETS. I do have things going against me: big fat hands, big fat fingers,
can’t bend down as much as the little guys, and i move a lot before final stroke. Oh well.
Ironically what you practice is the operative factor.Practicing is work, the harder & longer you will build mussel memory.
I see there’s still a lot of outdated “your problem is you don’t play good players” talk around here.
This isn’t 1995 where you need to be at the pool room to see what good play looks like. Or where you need to find someone willing to share knowledge.
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Are you starting with 1 ball?a) it is/was not meant to be fair
b) if you played the ghost, and every time you win, you add a ball, and every time you lose you subtract a ball:: after 20 games how many balls you you be racking ?
If you think about it, even for the pros, I am more likely to be watching finals and semifinals of noteworthy players so I am watching the best pros at their best.If you’re solely playing at home and your exposure to the pool community is what you see on-line, your opinion of what “average” pool looks like will be very skewed.
Are you starting with 1 ball?