What's difficult about pool is that you have to play it nearly perfectly to compete at the highest level.
I think that may apply to a lot of people, but not everyone. Haven’t you ever seen someone who can’t explain what they’re doing but play incredible? Some of these kids have never heard of deflection.
I think that may apply to a lot of people, but not everyone. Haven’t you ever seen someone who can’t explain what they’re doing but play incredible? Some of these kids have never heard of deflection.
We often hear, and tell ourselves, that pool is a very hard game to play. Well, this evening I was strolling through youtube and came across some videos of the organist for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
On one video he showed how it works. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NN0gfBjZWOc Basically, it's one of the hardest instruments to play. Five keyboards, plus a bunch of foot pedals just for starters.
To say that I am impressed by him, (Or anyone playing it), would be a large understatement. He has both hands, and both feet going all at the same time. And he has to put each appendage in a precise location for a certain amount of time very quickly.
As pool players, we have to swing one arm forward at a certain speed to hit a precise spot. And we can take a pretty good amount of time to line every thing up.
Nah, pool's not really hard, we just make it hard on ourselves.
Because you've hit a million balls. There is a lot I take into consideration but most of it is an unconscious process and happens spontaneously, for lack of a better word. I rarely think consciously about deflection etc. It's like second nature.
Every once in a while I mosey over to the aiming forum. If I thought about all of those things that they think about, I couldn't even stand at the table without falling over.
Pool is just about as easy a physical recreational game/sport than you can get. Maybe I rate pool slightly above bowling in difficulty, but not that much higher.
How many scratch golfers are there, compared to how many pool players have ever run 50 balls in straight pool?
If it is not out of the realm of possibility that a person with somewhat above average hand-eye coordination could take up the game well into adulthood and, after much time and practice, beat what can be regarded as "professional" player on a given night, then I would say the game is "easy". Not to say that this person can beat a pro with regularity, but that it's possible that he/she could beat a pro.You are probably doing it wrong then LOL. If you mean that it's easy to find a table to play on in a bar and lift a cue to swing it, yep, that is easy.
For golf, it depends on how early you started playing. Starting age does still matter for pool, but not nearly as much compared to golf or any other sport.This may not be a valid comparison because there are likely a lot more people that try to get good at golf compared to pool.
Maybe a better question would be "if you spend 1,000 hours practicing both sports, will you be a better golfer or pool player in relation to all other players".
If it is not out of the realm of possibility that a person with somewhat above average hand-eye coordination could take up the game well into adulthood and, after much time and practice, beat what can be regarded as "professional" player on a given night, then I would say the game is "easy". Not to say that this person can beat a pro with regularity, but that it's possible that he/she could beat a pro.
I want to know a golfer on the tour that didn't start playing extensively under the age of 10. Same can be asked of professionals in any of the major sports (baseball, basketball, hockey, tennis, etc.).
If pool were really easy, we'd all be playing like Shaw and Gorst.
To me the more interesting question is whether pool is harder to master than golf. I can think of several arguments on each side of that issue, but just to begin with a few....
The wind can't change the path of a cue ball.
You need to control more parts of your body in golf to achieve a perfect swing.
OTOH in golf your opponent can't control where you have to begin shooting. And I've never heard of a golf match where one player didn't even get a chance to step up to the tee.
And other than in putting, missing your target by a few inches or even more than a few yards doesn't kill you very often in golf. In pool even being out of line by an inch can often cost you a shot, a game, or even sometimes a match.