Saying "CTE works all the same" on 12 footer vs 7-8-9 footer, he probably means that the system works the same to pocket balls, not that you will make the same percentage of shots. Of course on a 12 footer the margin of error will be far smaller, thus harder to make each and every shot. CTE will not compensate for any inconsistency in your fundamentals you back it up with.
You're correct, mohrt -- I did take it that way. "champ" did indeed seem to say "CTE works all the same" as if to say "results would be the same" as the table size increases / pocket size decreases. The only reason I even jumped into this silly melee was to do a "Whoa Nellie!" hold-your-horses on that claim. However, I think I have a surprising revelation to those that've been limited to playing on smaller tables, thinking an aiming system will be the panacea for larger and larger table sizes. Something else creeps in, that becomes ever more important. Read on below...
do you think if i can make a 6 foot straight in shot but cant make a 12 foot straight in shot its the system and not me, is this what you mean? or you just want to see how good of a player i am?
champ2107:
You're reading far too much into things. The point of my request (suggestion, actually) was to show you there is much more to shot-making than just "determining the correct aiming point." Regardless of the system you use -- CTE, SEE, Back-of-ball (snooker), CP-to-CP, ghostball, whatever -- that you have to now DELIVER the cue ball to that spot.
I would offer that most here who are arguing about aiming systems don't have a clue about how much more important EXECUTION becomes over aim as the table size / real estate gets bigger. I would say the ratio becomes more in favor of aiming on smaller tables, and less so on larger and larger tables. Rationale? You can get away with lousy fundamentals on smaller tables as long as the aiming point you arrived at is true, but lousy fundamentals will bite you in the *ss on much larger tables.
BTW, that shot I proposed to you? It's not a straight-in shot. Re-think that one. If you're placing the cue ball in the "D" area on a snooker table, and shooting at a center-spotted blue, you are definitely cutting the ball, albeit the cut isn't as drastic as a spot-shot. So you definitely have to exercise your aiming system on this shot. The real lesson to be learned from this shot (and you'll see it, when you try it) is "can you deliver the cue ball to that aiming spot you arrived at?" My bet is that unless you've spent a lot of time honing your fundamentals, you can't. (Or at least not consistently enough to "bag" a good chunk out of a number like "10.")
This, BTW, is in keeping with the topic of this thread -- whether cue ball control or shot-making is more important. After you try my suggested shot, you be the judge. I think this shot is going to surprise you.
-Sean