onepocketchump said:It okay to have the opinion that it takes more skill to go a longer distance. The fact is however that if I know the diamond system then it doesn't matter whether the kick is two inches or twenty feet. The method used is the same on both shots. A player can learn the diamond system and be hitting the ball on most kick shots in minutes with the right instruction. Learning the nuances will take quite a while longer.
If by "nuances" you mean "how do I modify my english and aim point to clear obstacle balls" then I agree. Anybody can learn to kick fairly quickly on an open table. Blocker balls make it much tougher to "tweak" the system. I'm not sure if jumping 6 inches to get over a ball vs jumping 2 feet to get over a ball has as many variables involved as the different spin, speed, and aim points to try to get a 3 rail shot through traffic. I don't think it does, but I certainly can't say authoritativelty.
onepocketchump said:The same thing applies to jump shots. you can learn to jump fairly quickly. Learning to do it proficiently takes practice. In my opinion it takes more skill to feather a ball just right and make the cueball go up table and nestle up behind another ball than it does to kick. There is no system I can learn for that shot.
I believe that players are not learning to jump because jumping is easier than kicking. It's not. They are learning to jump because it is part of the game and a skill that is vital to success at pool under the current rules. Any player who is serious about their game learns all aspects of the game.
John
I agree with what you and macguy have said about making the game call-safety and allowing push outs of unintentional ones. Getting BIH in reward for an unintentional safety is somewhat unbalanced, even though I am sure that the law of averages would show that it happens to everybody about the same number of times. You don't feel that you should be penalized for your opponent's poor play, but I am sure that there are a lot of players out there who don't mind when it happens in their favor.
macguy said:I am sure you would. In many cases all it takes to play a safety is to drive a ball up table stopping the cue ball behind another ball, for that you want ball in hand? I know you are going to say, "well then learn to kick". There in lies the problem, a good kick is much harder to accomplish most of the time then the safety was to play. Your reward for doing almost nothing is too great. How about if you play me safe and I choose to kick, all I have to do is make a hit and I win the game. After all, if I don't make a hit I probably lose the game so why should you not be under the same jeopardy as me? Maybe play if you call safe and don't get me behind a ball I get ball in hand. It is probably no more ridiculous then the current ball in hand rule. Rules have to be fair to both players and ball in hand for a half assed safety or a lucky missed ball is just not fair.
Unintentional safeties are one thing, but called ones (in my hypothetical world) are different. If I call it, you have to shoot out of it no matter how easy it was for me to put you there. That's just playing the table and assessing the situiation. Complaining about that (IMO, obviously) is as silly as complaining that the 1 - 9 combo was left as a duck after the break and should be moved somewhere to make the shot harder. If the table lends itself to a good safety and the player sees it, calls it, and executes it then that's just playing smart IMO.
And before anybody asks, on an average day I would consider myself a strong C/weak B player at this point. Given a decent table I can generally run out from 5 balls, even though I won't jump to do it. I do kick better than a lot of players that I consider "better" than me, but that is probably because I need to. So take that into account when weighing my opinions.