Roy Steffensen said:Well, I don't know if I am a D player who improved to become a C, or a C becoming B etc, but what I did was:
In February 2007 I travelled to Philippines for 2 weeks, inspired by the thread "your man in Manila", by Jay Helfert. At this time I used most of my time organising pool tournaments etc, ant not so much time playing.
I got tons of motivation from that trip, and learned a lot. Played like 8-15 hours every day for almost 2 weeks, against the top players.
Back in Norway I used a couple of months to sort some personal things out, and when I had finished that I realized I had much more sparetime now than before. So I decided to dedicate myself to practise, and see how far I could go.
In July 07, I made a bet that I would become Norwegian Champion within 3 years. I bet 200 $ and if I make it I will win 10 000 $.
I bought mental books, instructional dvd's and matches on dvd's, and still do. Just got the Danny Harriman 280 run in 14-1 today, and will watch is as soon as I finish this post
I then made a practise-schedule/diary in excel, and used this to record EVERY SINGLE SHOT I did during practise, gambling or tournaments. I wrote when I started to practise, and what time I ended, I started to work-out more and eat healthier, and at the start of each week I decided what to practise on that week.
I followed this plan for 3 months, and in average I practised pool for more than 5 hours daily. For 90 days. After I finished job I went to the poolhall, then home to watch a dvd or read a book, then sleep.
After 3 months I practised about 2,5 hours in average every day for the next 2-3 months.
In this period I have visitied Philippines for 5,5 more weeks, 2 different stays, and used the weeks for mainly practising and studying the best players in the world.
Now I haven't been good in doing stats/notes etc the last 6 months, for some reasons I will not talk about here, and now I am only keeping record of all my matches/tournaments. I have planned a new 2 months practise period with minimum 30 hours a week, and will start on that very, very soon.
For me I have had awesome results. My highest finishes in the Norwegian Championships was 4 times in a row finish 17th. (Lost hill-hill all times).
After this hard work I have now a 5th and a 3rd place in the Norwegian Championships, only lost to the winners of the tournaments.
My break and run stats improved from 11 % in average to 23,5 % in average in 9-ball, and this was mainly because I was focusing so much on these stats. I was "afraid to dog" balls in matches, because I was doing notes, so my focus and will to make balls improved. For me this has been working as motivation, but I can see that for others it will distract their focus... (If I missed a ball I mark it on a paper with a letter describing what kind of miss it was. E = easy, P = position etc. When I started doing this over 60 % of my misses was easy shots that I should make 10 out of 10, now easy shots are about 30 % of my misses. The others are bad position, bad choice, bad contact etc.)
In the 3 month period I spent 33 % of my time doing drills, 10 % of the time playing 14-1 alone, 7 % of the time practising on my break in 8-ball, 9-ball and 10-ball, 20 % was used on gambling matches, 15 % on "friendly-matches", 10 % on tournaments and the remaining on instructional, cleaning table and balls, watching dvd's, reading books etc.
Before I used to drink beer when playing, now I am dead serious when playing, and try to be an athlete.
My game has definitely jumped some levels in this period of time, and even if I will not reach my goal, pool is a lot more fun for me now than I ever had before. And that says a lot! Practising to reach a goal has made me change my hobby from being a social thing to a sport, and I am loving every minute of it.
Wow Roy!
You just became my new hero!
:thumbup: