This is good stuff. I do see where you are coming from and I get what you're saying.
I do think the games of 14.1, 1 pocket, and even to a certain extent bar table 8 ball requires this sort of precise cue ball control. I don't think that 9 and 10 ball require this sort of precision. Of course if two players have similar potting abilities, then the only thing that would separate them would be their cue ball control. So at the very top of the food chain that's really all they have to distinguish themselves apart from each other. But for the rest of us mere mortals I'm not so sure.
I do think all players would benefit from the sort of practice you are talking about. Anytime you have really focused, intense practice, it can do nothing but help you. I've done this sort of practice, although admittedly not to the level that you are talking about, and I've seen some positive results. But I haven't seen anything improve my game the way working on my pocketing ability has. Actually it's not even close.
One other thing that is often overlooked in this discussion is the origin of a player's confidence. This is where it may come down to all of us being built a little differently. What makes you a confident player? Is it knowing you can get the cue ball where it needs to go? Or is it knowing you can pocket the ball? Or is it a combination of the two? For me, my confidence has always relied on whether or not I could put the ball in the hole. If I missed shape several times in a row in a tough match it didn't really faze me. I would just tell myself that as soon as I get the table figured out I would be fine. However, when I start missing some makeable balls -- LOOK OUT! That's when I'm in trouble. It's almost like a primal thing for me -- see the hole -- put the ball in the hole.
My whole point of view on this subject is simply based on the idea that too many players stop working on improving their pocketing skills too soon in their development. Then they start focusing on cue ball control. That's what I did. I just accepted the fact that some tough shots were always going to be tough shots for me. So I have to play better position to avoid them. Well, I now reject that thinking. And I have obviously taken it a step further now that I've been down the road of working on pocketing the balls for over a year now.
The epiphany that you had when you watched Mosconi play was sort of like the epiphany I had when I watched SVB play, or actually even further back than that - watching Karen Corr play. I was thinking how in the world can she pocket balls so much better than me??? It was a bit chauvinistic on my part I'll admit, but that's when I realized I was doing things wrong.
And that's all I have to say about that. Talk about a long post.:thumbup: