Jose Parica tried to go between the 8 and 9 but hit the 9 with the rock. He came out good though. I think he hit the shot with a little left, intentional or not but it's tough to tell for sure.
I wonder how many that say that have actually set it up exactly as shown and tried it? I haven't, but unless one has really dead rails, the cb will end up even with the 8, and then you have to go around the table for the 9 or take a tough cut.
You are hitting a little less than 1/4 of the 7 by the looks of it. That means your cb will go at least 3 times as far as the 7 goes. Just don't see holding it for the 8. Looks to me like one of those shots that people think they can hold it, then end up in trouble.
Jose Parica tried to go between the 8 and 9 but hit the 9 with the rock. He came out good though. I think he hit the shot with a little left, intentional or not but it's tough to tell for sure.
Jose is one of my all time favorite players, but if I had to point at one thing that has prevented him from winning as much as he could (should) have, it would be shot selection. I have seen him make so many baffling choices over the years, and while I don't consider this to be a terrible decision, I think there were higher percentage options for someone of his skill. FWIW, I feel the same way about Luat.
Aaron
Jose is one of my all time favorite players, but if I had to point at one thing that has prevented him from winning as much as he could (should) have, it would be shot selection. I have seen him make so many baffling choices over the years, and while I don't consider this to be a terrible decision, I think there were higher percentage options for someone of his skill. FWIW, I feel the same way about Luat.
Aaron
One man's "shot" is another man's "safety". The same goes for "lines" and "shot selections". I have hit a million balls (literally in my lifetime) and I have shot the "same" shot or line thousands of times. However, based upon how I am shooting, feeling, or how the table is playing, I may feel more "comfortable" with shooting a shot that goes "against the grain" of what I would play on a "different" day.
There is no right way or wrong way, IMHO. The results are the only thing that count. If you go one rail to get position and I go three rails to get to the same spot, there is no difference.
One man's "shot" is another man's "safety". The same goes for "lines" and "shot selections". I have hit a million balls (literally in my lifetime) and I have shot the "same" shot or line thousands of times. However, based upon how I am shooting, feeling, or how the table is playing, I may feel more "comfortable" with shooting a shot that goes "against the grain" of what I would play on a "different" day.
There is no right way or wrong way, IMHO. The results are the only thing that count. If you go one rail to get position and I go three rails to get to the same spot, there is no difference.
Here is a diagram of a shot from one of my games yesterday. I accidentally "reversed" the ends of the table in the diagram...the foot spot should be on the other end, but the layout is the same.
He scratched on the break and I had ball in hand on the one which was near the two. I shot the one in the corner and stopped on the two to leave the angle as shown. He asked why I stopped there. I told him I wanted to shoot the "five" and he didn't know what I was talking about and said, "no, you are shooting the two".
I told him that "five" was the center spot on the end rail and I wanted the angle to come off the five spot and hit near or above the "five" on the long rail which is the spot on the rail right before the pocket. I saw that I had the angle to "float" the ball on the NATURAL line without trying to "spin" it around like a top.
I hit the ball with "heavy stun" but enough stroke and force to bring the ball around the table four rails and it came into the exact spot I told him I was aiming for. I got LUCKY, like Efren, and then ran out.
Most people wouldn't have played this line, or maybe even saw it. There is NO "right" way or "wrong" way unless there is "NO WAY". Position is the Teacher.
Actually, I think there is a difference. They may both get position, but the guy that tends to do it the harder way will screw it up more often than the guy that goes the easy way. So, I feel there are "right" ways, and "wrong" ways to shoot a shot. You always have to go with what gives you the best odds. Once you start pushing the odds, eventually you will pay for it.
Here is a diagram of a shot from one of my games yesterday. I accidentally "reversed" the ends of the table in the diagram...the foot spot should be on the other end, but the layout is the same.
He scratched on the break and I had ball in hand on the one which was near the two. I shot the one in the corner and stopped on the two to leave the angle as shown. He asked why I stopped there. I told him I wanted to shoot the "five" and he didn't know what I was talking about and said, "no, you are shooting the two".
I told him that "five" was the center spot on the end rail and I wanted the angle to come off the five spot and hit near or above the "five" on the long rail which is the spot on the rail right before the side pocket. I saw that I had the angle to "float" the ball on the NATURAL line without trying to "spin" it around like a top.
I hit the ball with "heavy stun" but enough stroke and force to bring the ball around the table four rails and it came into the exact spot I told him I was aiming for. I got LUCKY, like Efren, and then ran out.
Most people wouldn't have played this line, or maybe even saw it. There is NO "right" way or "wrong" way unless there is "NO WAY". Position is the Teacher.
I'd dog the 7 and leave it hanging, then concede.