joe tucker aiming system

Only two prominent comedians come to mind that I don't think are funny... at... all. One is Ellen Degeneres and the other is Dane Cook. I watched about an hour of his stand up on TV and I couldn't figure out for the life of me why people pay to see this guy. I think in an hour he said one or two things that made me almost crack a smile, and that's saying a lot 'cause I like to laugh.

I think we're starting to have some things in common. I agree 100%, especially Ellen DeGeneres. I don't know if she gets off of her fat ass any more to do anything but Rosie O'Donnell is another one.

Don't know if you remember Sam Kinison who got killed in a car accident but he really used to crack me up. He was insane...absolutely INSANE!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9GXPd0fnpKw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SJIh2WLOQA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cV1dyV9d_1k

(your results may vary)
 
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Those of us without near genius IQ's cannot possibly understand.


I don't know how to even address this statement..it is so bizarre.

It isn't like one guy aiming wrong for a year is going to upset the pool world from a potential WORLD CHAMPION and you and PJ are the SAVIORS of the pool world.

This sounds like Obama rhetoric.

If you play pool and can't aim then maybe you need to be bowling.

Anybody can learn to aim in a week. Whether your fundamentals and stroke follow suit is another matter.
 
Like someone told me awhile back, you should learn how to use the multiple quote function because it is cumbersome to reply when you write in blue inside the post you are responding to.

Now Robin, you're playing word games like your idol Batman Johnson. I've never said opinions don't matter and you damn well know that.


But you are effectively saying that. When you challenge people to prove they can shoot pool accurately you are saying that if they can't, then their opinion is worth less. In some cases that is true, but I think everybody in this discussion has more than enough experience with poking balls with sticks to understand the issues involved.

The word "DEBATE" tells me you aren't even close to that point with CTE so it's not going to happen. I'm so sick and tired of this SH!T I could care less whether anybody wants to even USE it or not let alone debate. I'm also so sick and tired of this SH!T on the forum that my time here is going to be NIL very soon.

You shouldn't let this stuff get you so upset. The problem is that you are dealing with a lot of analytical minded people who want concrete answers to simple questions. When the answer is something like you just have to do it until your mind sees the perception, or something vague like that it becomes unsatisfying for everybody.

Btw, what do you use personally to aim. Whatever it is, you're doing it very well.
I assure you I'm not going to knock it and say it's no good or anything else.
I hope you respect me enough to do likewise with what I've chosen to use and know it works. If not...well you can guess the future.

Thank you. My opinion is that aiming is the easier part and that achieving a good alignment of the cue on that aim line is 90% of the task. I always used ghost ball, but after so many years I don't really even use that. I just know where it needs to be hit to make the ball. The brain is orders of magnitude more powerful than the fastest supercomputer networks we have today. If you can stroke straight your brain will relatively quickly learn from its mistakes if you give it a chance.

My accuracy in pocketing and cue ball control went up when I finally learned how to straighten out my stroke. It only took two years to figure out! Not so much talent but determination.

If CTE helped you get to the high level you play at today, then that's great. In my opinion you and I probably pocket balls the same way. I have my own preshot routine and you have yours, which involves a pivoting of the cue and other body motions before you get down to executing the shot. I think we both "just know" when it looks right and we execute the shot. All the preshot stuff, again in my opinion, is not meaningful.

Sheri Stauch at Billiards Digest did an interview in the 90's (google it) on how the pro's aim. She interviewed them and published their answers. The short of it is that they "just know" because they've played a long time.

If Stan's new book clears everything up as to what a player has to do to make it work then great! I could say a lot more about that and why I got into this discussion after so long, but that's a different subject.

And to get THIS THREAD back on track, I think highly of Joe Tucker, his Contact Point aiming system with the training balls, grid, and other materials he's designed for game improvement. SUPER INSTRUCTOR, EXCELLENT PLAYER, and GREAT INDIVIDUAL.

I have Joe's book, Racking Secrets. It's a really unique book with some cool tricks about 9 ball racks. Highly recommended.
 
I think we're starting to have some things in common. I agree 100%, especially Ellen DeGeneres. I don't know if she gets off of her fat ass any more to do anything but Rosie O'Donnell is another one.

Don't know if you remember Sam Kinison who got killed in a car accident but he really used to crack me up. He was insane...absolutely INSANE!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9GXPd0fnpKw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SJIh2WLOQA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cV1dyV9d_1k

(your results may vary)

That guy was awesome. I remember him well. I think the newest guy I've seen that made me roll on the floor was Brian Regan. I had never heard of him and saw his first special. I couldn't stop laughing. The second special wasn't quite as funny, though. Rare for a comedian to have clean language and subject matter these days.

Here's a random clip:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVRVA3mun3Q
 
...on some shots especially cut backs which like most i tend to over cut
i look at it both from the contact point to the pocket and the number on joes scale
it has helped me to increase my make percentage....:smile:
Sure - Joe's numbers help visualize the location of the CB contact point by giving you a "ruler" on the balls to measure the "equal opposite" distance from the CB's center.

As I mentioned in another post above, Joe's "rulers" work either oriented to the rails or to the CB/OB centerline (as long as they're both oriented the same). Personally, I'd use them oriented to the CB/OB centerline, because I think that's less prone to estimation error (and I don't see the value of orienting to the table).

pj
chgo
 
Like someone told me awhile back, you should learn how to use the multiple quote function because it is cumbersome to reply when you write in blue inside the post you are responding to.

Since this is the last time I'm going to reply, I'll quickly do it this way and that's it. If you decide to reply back, it's up to you but it will go unanswered.
My advice is don't waste your time and efforts.


But you are effectively saying that. When you challenge people to prove they can shoot pool accurately you are saying that if they can't, then their opinion is worth less. In some cases that is true, but I think everybody in this discussion has more than enough experience with poking balls with sticks to understand the issues involved.

If everybody in the discussion has more than enough experience poking balls they shouldn't be chickensh!t like some are to make videos and claim videos prove nothing. BULLSH!T!! It has little to do with shooting accurately since there are other reasons to do it. One would be to demonstrate what they're doing or how they understand a particular system to work and DESCRIBE what they're doing which may in fact be incorrect to what is being taught. They could then be corrected immediately by those who know and none of this crap would continue forever.

What you and I did was an accuracy test developed by Colin Colenso and proved the accuracy factor with the systems we use and how skilled we have become with them, that's all. The reason why you and I took it on shows another commonality which was my motivation and yours. We both saw it as a CHALLENGE and just wanted to give it a whirl to see what the results would be. I think you and I had the best results by only missing one shot. I don't recall a perfect score. It was what it was. I'm, still reminded of how lousy I play any time I go to Allen Hopkins' house and get completely wasted by him. Big difference between a decent amateur and top pro even though he's no longer in his prime. It's like light years.

If somebody demonstrates what they understand about CTE as they verbalize the visuals as to how they're setting up and aligning, the best thing to come out of it is they MISS BALLS which gives us the info we need to correct it. It'll jump right out. The more they MISS the BETTER because their opinion and understanding of the system is more than likely off. There's help on the way instead of the knocking and bickering that it's worthless. The worse part is they never get on the table for starters and attempt to learn it from ADD ON YOUTUBE VIDEOS. However the WORST part is to use the excuse that the system ISN'T LOGICAL so why waste time even getting on the table. Then it's DEBATED or supposed to be debated from that.

Hal developed the 3 Line (angle) aiming system which was immediately pounced on and maligned by the RSB geniuses, and STILL IS. Yet I could take YOU who is a good shooter using one of his other systems instead of CTE, work with you on the phone telling you what to look at, how to set up and pivot, and within 30 minutes you'd have more than enough knowledge and know how to make it work for every cut angle on the table. You wouldn't be as successful with the high percentage of shots made in Colin's test using your own system, but if you worked with it for a few weeks I'd be willing to bet it would be pretty damn close. It still isn't as accurate as CTE taught now by Stan but you would know where Hal was coming from and it does work. I'd also be willing to guess when we were done you wouldn't be able to dissect why it worked exactly the way it does even though balls went in from everywhere. But you could knock yourself out trying if you wanted to devote the time.


You shouldn't let this stuff get you so upset.

Life is too short and time is too precious and should be used elsewhere. Since joining AZ I've spent far too much time on this same subject and I will NEVER do it for two decades on a daily basis like Pat Johnson. I'm fairly young and a number of guys I know have already died. I can't imagine the last 10 minutes of my life wondering what I could have or should have done instead of wasting it on a garbage aiming section of a pool forum with people who only want to argue and disparage a system or those who teach and use it. NOPE, ain't gonna happen!

The problem is that you are dealing with a lot of analytical minded people who want concrete answers to simple questions.

Those analytical minds ARE the problem and exactly what impedes their progress. It's like someone never getting on an airplane until they have a complete understanding of the aerodynamics of a plane and flight as well as the training of the pilot for all of the controls to fly it.

When the answer is something like you just have to do it until your mind sees the perception, or something vague like that it becomes unsatisfying for everybody.

Or you just have to keep doing it AS INSTRUCTED and if you never make many balls THEN you ask for help as far as what you might be doing wrong.

Thank you. My opinion is that aiming is the easier part and that achieving a good alignment of the cue on that aim line is 90% of the task. I always used ghost ball, but after so many years I don't really even use that.

Is it really ghost ball or foreseeing both balls colliding at their contact points as well as where the edge of the CB is at impact on the OB? That's the way I used to aim for years and it was more of the latter.

I just know where it needs to be hit to make the ball. The brain is orders of magnitude more powerful than the fastest supercomputer networks we have today. If you can stroke straight your brain will relatively quickly learn from its mistakes if you give it a chance.

Stroking straight can never be downplayed. It IS what delivers the ball to it's destination regardless of the aiming system.

My accuracy in pocketing and cue ball control went up when I finally learned how to straighten out my stroke. It only took two years to figure out! Not so much talent but determination.

If CTE helped you get to the high level you play at today, then that's great. In my opinion you and I probably pocket balls the same way. I have my own preshot routine and you have yours, which involves a pivoting of the cue and other body motions before you get down to executing the shot. I think we both "just know" when it looks right and we execute the shot. All the preshot stuff, again in my opinion, is not meaningful.

I'd say that's close but not exactly as far as how it looks being the determining factor to pull the trigger if trying to link CB to OB to POCKET angles. It is for almost all other systems but not CTE. The concern for contact point of the two balls and angle to the pocket isn't there which is one helluva hurdle for most to get out of their minds when first starting to learn CTE or the brick wall to even trying it because it isn't logical or whatever the hell other excuse can be cited.

Sheri Stauch at Billiards Digest did an interview in the 90's (google it) on how the pro's aim. She interviewed them and published their answers. The short of it is that they "just know" because they've played a long time.

I've seen that article many times and in the end they do know. Some use specific aiming systems, some said they use nothing, and some either can't or aren't willing to want to get into it to end the conversation.

If Stan's new book clears everything up as to what a player has to do to make it work then great! I could say a lot more about that and why I got into this discussion after so long, but that's a different subject.

My guess is the same individuals who harass him now and have for years will go through his book with a fine tooth comb picking out words here and there to continue the harangue. It probably will clear everything up but not allowed to by those with agendas. They'll be like Bill Clinton wanting to know what the definition of "IS" IS.

I have Joe's book, Racking Secrets. It's a really unique book with some cool tricks about 9 ball racks. Highly recommended.

I buy everything from just about all instructors and players and have his racking secrets. It's a MUST HAVE. I'm also not afraid to spend money on lessons from great instructors. A number of years back I drove to RI and spent a bunch of time with Joe at the table. He's brilliant.

Why not spend the money on our passion of pool instead of wasting it on women? (only kidding...about the women part. Gotta spend it there also) LMAO
 
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That guy was awesome. I remember him well. I think the newest guy I've seen that made me roll on the floor was Brian Regan. I had never heard of him and saw his first special. I couldn't stop laughing. The second special wasn't quite as funny, though. Rare for a comedian to have clean language and subject matter these days.

Here's a random clip:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVRVA3mun3Q

This dude really is funny. Not only is he a comedian but great actor to get in character for the delivery of the jokes along with perfect timing.
 
Sorry guys, but Sam Kinison was by far one of the WORST stand up comedians ever.

OK, name 3 comedians that had you tearing up with laughter. Let's see if you have a sense of humor. :wink:

When I was a teenager I saw Rodney Dangerfield live in Elisabeth, NJ (kind of an industrial town). He opened the show with "So here I am in Elisabeth...Whoopee!" Everyone chuckled and for the next 2 hours it was non stop one liners. I was begging for him to stop I was laughing so hard!

Oh, that reminds me. I saw Andrew Dice Clay with his leather jacket in a tiny club well before he became famous. I was there with a friend and two girls. WOW, talk about an uncomfortable situation! After the show (and the heckling) started I looked at my friend like it was kind of funny, but definitely not a show for mixed company!
 
OK, name 3 comedians that had you tearing up with laughter. Let's see if you have a sense of humor. :wink:

When I was a teenager I saw Rodney Dangerfield live in Elisabeth, NJ (kind of an industrial town). He opened the show with "So here I am in Elisabeth...Whoopee!" Everyone chuckled and for the next 2 hours it was non stop one liners. I was begging for him to stop I was laughing so hard!

Oh, that reminds me. I saw Andrew Dice Clay with his leather jacket in a tiny club well before he became famous. I was there with a friend and two girls. WOW, talk about an uncomfortable situation! After the show (and the heckling) started I looked at my friend like it was kind of funny, but definitely not a show for mixed company!

Rodney was hilarious. ADC is another one that isn't funny.
 
Rodney was hilarious. ADC is another one that isn't funny.

In general, I agree. However, he does have one joke I couldn't help but laugh at. It goes something like this:

"Jack and Jill go up the hill, each with a buck and a quarter. Jill comes down with two-fifty....Oooohhhh!!"
 
Oh, that reminds me. I saw Andrew Dice Clay with his leather jacket in a tiny club well before he became famous. I was there with a friend and two girls. WOW, talk about an uncomfortable situation! QUOTE]

I'll bet it was. Two gay couples out on the town with each udder to watch Andrew Dice Clay talkin' sh!t about dat.

(I had to do it, too good to pass up) :grin:
(just fukkin' wit yu)
 
Oh, that reminds me. I saw Andrew Dice Clay with his leather jacket in a tiny club well before he became famous. I was there with a friend and two girls. WOW, talk about an uncomfortable situation! QUOTE]

I'll bet it was. Two gay couples out on the town with each udder to watch Andrew Dice Clay talkin' sh!t about dat.

(I had to do it, too good to pass up) :grin:
(just fukkin' wit yu)

LOL. That would have been a lot funnier if you could manage to figure out how to use the quote tags, Einstein...Ooooohhhh! :p
 
LOL. That would have been a lot funnier if you could manage to figure out how to use the quote tags, Einstein...Ooooohhhh! :p

Hey, at least when I was creating the post I used my best Andrew Dice Clay impression while typing. That should count for something. :grin:

OK, I'll figure out the quote tags IF, and only IF you learn CTE the correct way as it's taught in full instead of bits and pieces to just keep being a menace to society along with your best buddies PJ and Lou, Mr. Hawking. Deal? (as painful as it might be and then to admit you were wrong after finally getting it)
 
Hey, at least when I was creating the post I used my best Andrew Dice Clay impression while typing. That should count for something. :grin:

OK, I'll figure out the quote tags IF, and only IF you learn CTE the correct way as it's taught in full instead of bits and pieces to just keep being a menace to society along with your best buddies PJ and Lou, Hawking. Deal? (as painful as it might be and then to admit you were wrong after finally getting it)

JB sent me a private message awhile back in which he said he wanted to send me a DVD so I could see the system (after he already said I could learn everything I needed to know on Youtube). He asked that I send it back to him to lend out to somebody else if I didn't like it. I said, OK no problem and I'd pass it on to somebody else if he wanted. I gave him my home address. Next thing I know on the public forum he chastises me for wanting a free DVD that I could easily buy for myself! As ADC would say, "Ain't dat a pissa! Oooohhhh!" I was done with Mr. Split Personality after that.

I fell into this forum almost by accident and thought I'd give CTE another look. I didn't need it so much for aiming, but if it could help me pocket 1 and especially 2 rail banks then cool.

I think I already know how it works, but I've had to figure it out for myself. Nobody who actually uses CTE seems to be able to explain how a 1,2,3 type instruction results in seeing the same visual from two different starting points. Others who have the DVD have told me that this issue is not answered, so I'm not sure what benefit there is to getting it.

I appreciate the civil attitude. I think you are the only guy who believes me when I say that I wish CTE did work the way it is described. Who wouldn't want to be able to use something like that? It does seem to help some people. The question for me at this point is why it helps.
 
I think I already know how it works, but I've had to figure it out for myself. Nobody who actually uses CTE seems to be able to explain how a 1,2,3 type instruction results in seeing the same visual from two different starting points. Others who have the DVD have told me that this issue is not answered, so I'm not sure what benefit there is to getting it.

I appreciate the civil attitude. I think you are the only guy who believes me when I say that I wish CTE did work the way it is described. Who wouldn't want to be able to use something like that? It does seem to help some people. The question for me at this point is why it helps.

I think what you figured out for yourself isn't all the things you should know, see and DO to get it to work, especially from individual youtubes.

CTE really does work as described and I don't think you should pursue why it helps but to actually get it to work and help, however you might not care enough now.

Apparently I, Stan, and others who defend and praise the system know something more than you do in the instructions as well as execution. I can assure you none of us are stupid enough to praise something that really has no merits.

I don't think you did yourself too many favors by going into your Pat Johnson and Lou Figueroa anti-CTE act either when you made the comments about Stan that you did. Now that I know a little bit about how your funny bone works you could have made a lot more progress going into the ADC impression than the gruesome twosome above.

You did a video attempting the five shots but in that video you should have done a very comprehensive step by step of what you were actually seeing, how you moved into the shot alignment and what was being lined up to where, whether you were attempting manual CTE or PRO 1, and then pulled the trigger to strike the balls.

As I've stated, videos can reveal or prove EVERYTHING if done properly. Your precise explanations and MISSED shots would have provided what was needed for correction.

It would be like if you were a pilot flying a plane and radioed your coordinates or flight path to a tower and were then told you were going off course but to make an adjustment to the new coordinates. Problem easily solved.

(I'm getting sucked back into posting and I don't want to)
 
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