How to learn to aim by feel

iusedtoberich

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
How to learn to aim by feel

Step 1:
Set up a shot. But it has to be the “complete shot”. In other words, both pocketing of the OB, and resultant position of the CB. Mark the CB and OB with doughnuts, and mark the desired position area.

Step 2:
Try the shot a few times. If you make both the OB, and the position, then try it to repeat it 7, 8, or 9 out of 10 times. Take note also to make the OB in the correct part of the pocket, for whatever the shot at hand is. If you hit the rail on the way in, you don’t have it yet, and you need further fine tuning.

Step 3:
If you don’t succeed with making the OB and position, aim for a thinner or thicker hit. You might also have to adjust your speed, and your elevation angle, or the amount of spin on the CB. Keep fooling around with these parameters until you make the complete shot. Once you get it, try to repeat it 7, 8, or 9 out of 10 times.

Step 4:
If you really want to test yourself, vary the shot just slightly. The CB-OB distance by a diamond, or the cut angle by a few degrees, etc., and repeat steps 2 and 3. Those changes might make a significant difference in the shot. Another way to really test yourself, is to keep the same CB-OB doughnuts, and change the target position. You will see for the same given ball position, the hit on the CB and aim on the OB will need to be completely different for another resultant CB desired position.

Step 5:
Repeat all of the above with shots that you had trouble with during a game situation. This way, you will be guaranteed to be working on your particular weaknesses.

What does it work on:
Any type of shot, because are finding the solution by experimentation. You don’t need to know physics or geometry or even 1+1. Every shot (that is possible anyway) has a solution. If you are hitting the CB at warp speed this will work. If you are slow drag spinning a length of the table shot ala Efren this will work.

How it works:
Your eye/arm/brain connection will remember what the correct shot picture looks like for a given “complete shot.” This eye/arm/brain connection will be reinforced once you have practiced the shot in question and have success with it 7, 8, or 9 times out of 10.
 
Alrighty IUTBR. Having read many of your posts, you seem to be the type of fella who could answer this withou hesitation. Put the CB on the head spot and the OB on the foot spot. ( I forget the name for this shot) What's the degree of the cut into a corner. Now put the CB on the head string halfway between the spot and the rail. Put the OB at the same place on the foot string. What's the degree of the cut into the close corner?

I can't make heads or tails of a protractor, and anyhow, I don't have one that big....STOP LAUGHING!
 
The thing about feel is that the actual degree of the cut angle does not matter. The only thing that matters is understanding how the increase in cut angle decreases the amount of energy transferred to the OB.

High degree cut angle shots require more energy to move the OB that a straight in shot. It is understanding this concept that is important and not if the cut angle is xx degree.

Also, angle measurement is done in degrees, minutes and seconds. There is no way to know for sure if a cut angle is 30 degrees or 28 degrees or something in between.
 
Nice.

I'd add that there's another dimension of complexity when you factor in the variance in the equipment.... balls/rails/cloth. Then there's weather effects. I find differences in lighting hard to adjust to.

And the human factor. My "feel" was so ajar playing at 915am on a Saturday morning for a tournament. Exact same table and balls I was on 48 hours prior for league. The place doesn't open until 5pm during the week; had never experienced ambient sunshine there.

When I started, I came to view it as akin to shooting hoops. But an even more so damn complex equation to solve, F(a,b,c,......

May the Force be with you, I tell myself. And that it's the same for my opponent. So let's do it.

(something like that)
 
I believe that one transitions into a feel player over time.

That the thought process goes from what to do, how to do it, then doing it to what to do, then doing it.

The middle step will decrease over time, over practice. The goal is not have any "I" so that it can happen.
 
Alrighty IUTBR. Having read many of your posts, you seem to be the type of fella who could answer this withou hesitation. Put the CB on the head spot and the OB on the foot spot. ( I forget the name for this shot) What's the degree of the cut into a corner. Now put the CB on the head string halfway between the spot and the rail. Put the OB at the same place on the foot string. What's the degree of the cut into the close corner?

I can't make heads or tails of a protractor, and anyhow, I don't have one that big....STOP LAUGHING!

It makes no difference what the calculated angle is. All that matters is that you train your eye/arm/brain connection to remember the correct "total shot picture". In your example, set up both shots repeatetly, until you learn them:) PS, make sure you incorporate the desired CB position into the shot, otherwise you didn't learn the "complete shot".
 
Nice.

I'd add that there's another dimension of complexity when you factor in the variance in the equipment.... balls/rails/cloth. Then there's weather effects. I find differences in lighting hard to adjust to.

And the human factor. My "feel" was so ajar playing at 915am on a Saturday morning for a tournament. Exact same table and balls I was on 48 hours prior for league. The place doesn't open until 5pm during the week; had never experienced ambient sunshine there.

When I started, I came to view it as akin to shooting hoops. But an even more so damn complex equation to solve, F(a,b,c,......

May the Force be with you, I tell myself. And that it's the same for my opponent. So let's do it.

(something like that)
Just a guess, but do you tend to swipe to the outside of the CB on a lot of cut shots. This could explain a lot of variability according to table conditions.
 
I just shoot the balls in the pocket. 99% of the time the ball goes in, but the 1% of the time it doesn't it is the tables fault.......not mine.
 
It makes no difference what the calculated angle is. All that matters is that you train your eye/arm/brain connection to remember the correct "total shot picture". In your example, set up both shots repeatetly, until you learn them:) PS, make sure you incorporate the desired CB position into the shot, otherwise you didn't learn the "complete shot".
I read where you described yourself as an intermediate the other day. You're moving up in the world. This being the case, I'll have to write you a p.m one of these days. I'm sure you're waiting with bated breah! I guess I could start a thread, " What advise should be given an intermediate," but I have a few strong opinions that have been argued ad nauseum on these forums and I'm not in the mood to start things up again.

Oh.....never play pool while wearing sandals! That's some advise no one should argue with. I saw you doing that on some video about two years ago. I was playing barefoot about 20 years ago. While racking the balls one dropped on my toe. I was hopping around on one foot while holding my toe for it seems like forever....never again?
 
I read where you described yourself as an intermediate the other day. You're moving up in the world. This being the case, I'll have to write you a p.m one of these days. I'm sure you're waiting with bated breah! I guess I could start a thread, " What advise should be given an intermediate," but I have a few strong opinions that have been argued ad nauseum on these forums and I'm not in the mood to start things up again.

Oh.....never play pool while wearing sandals! That's some advise no one should argue with. I saw you doing that on some video about two years ago. I was playing barefoot about 20 years ago. While racking the balls one dropped on my toe. I was hopping around on one foot while holding my toe for it seems like forever....never again?

Thankfully, my PM's are full, and I'm very lazy about deleting them;)
 
Thankfully, my PM's are full, and I'm very lazy about deleting them;)
Hmm.... I don't know what I posted that wrinkled your panties since we last spoke, but benevolent fella that I am, I'll suggest you go through all you can that C.J Wiley has written in these threads... maybe even purchase his C.D's. Then you might do the same with Fran Crimmi.

As for amateur posters, English and McJary are two of my favorites, but there are many others I've learned from.

........Then again; you can remain an intermediate your whole life.

......
 
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