You dont have to be SVB or Mika to shoot a draw shot for position in this scenario, even on worn/slow cloth. Why pick a shot that might mess up the layout?
If you think this is a hard shot to play with draw, you need to work on your technique.
The first 3 rails have running english and if it gets to the 4th it kills. Giving the best angle and largest area to stop in the target zone.You can always tell the players
Shannon Daulton shot it like this:
View attachment 369822
Leaving it here for a nice shot at the 8 ball;
View attachment 369823
I'd like to see video evidence of this.I'm not as good as him, but I did the same thing 5 times in a row going one rail with half the stroke. I ended up leaving myself in the same place, too.
You can always tell the players
Shannon Daulton shot it like this:
View attachment 369822
Leaving it here for a nice shot at the 8 ball;
View attachment 369823
I'd like to see video evidence of this.
I set it up on my table, and the one-railer is simply not there. At least on my table, there is no way to avoid the 9 going one-rail...
If there was some traffic, I might try the 3 rails. I'd be curious to see how often an average player hit that shot consistently. I like to shoot a simpler game with stun, reverse, and killing the cue ball, I guess.I definitely need the 7!
Best,
Mike
I love the guys who think inside power shots are so easy!
I know its an ONB trap, so I'm playing safe. Hit the 7 ball about lag speed, no english....into the short rail and back towards 8 ball. (7 lands close by the 8, but hopefully on the short rail.) Cue ball goes 2-3 rails, and lands preferably behind the 9 ball.
I love the guys who think inside power shots are so easy!
I know its an ONB trap, so I'm playing safe. Hit the 7 ball about lag speed, no english....into the short rail and back towards 8 ball. (7 lands close by the 8, but hopefully on the short rail.) Cue ball goes 2-3 rails, and lands preferably behind the 9 ball.
If there was some traffic, I might try the 3 rails. I'd be curious to see how often an average player hit that shot consistently. I like to shoot a simpler game with stun, reverse, and killing the cue ball, I guess.I definitely need the 7!
Best,
Mike
For 20+ years I considered myself a good player, even beating national champions in that time, and I would have avoided inside english stun 3 rail shots throughout that period... until I learned how to use Back Hand English. Now, it's as easy to me as dribbling that ball in with slow roll. Not skill, just knowledge of a method, and some practice to get to know the pivot point of your cue.If there was some traffic, I might try the 3 rails. I'd be curious to see how often an average player hit that shot consistently. I like to shoot a simpler game with stun, reverse, and killing the cue ball, I guess.I definitely need the 7!
Best,
Mike
And if you don't get safe? This shot is the best shot you'll probably see, why not try to get out?
The way Daulton shot it is a standard 3 Cushion shot that you need to familiarize yourself with, it'll pay big dividends in the future. The only hard part of the shot is it needs some draw to get to the 1st rail, after that it's all downhill. The cueball is dying as it enters the zone of position and that's great.
Practice this 3 railer from different places on the table until it becomes second nature for you. It's not tough and it'll make you a better player. Remember this; Daulton didn't shoot that shot because he's a good player, he's a good player because he shot that shot.
ONB