Varner told another once, he throw the balls out and hit em, when he missed, he'd work on that shot and continue till another miss arose.
The same Nick Varner that beat Landon 3-0?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKm1Y1XxEmQ
Varner told another once, he throw the balls out and hit em, when he missed, he'd work on that shot and continue till another miss arose.
I just recently started doing drills and It really feels like Im getting worse. I have been playing like hell in my matches lately. I have put together a few break and runs though which I never did before.
You feel like you're getting worse because drills suck. When you do them you consciously, and subconsciously, know it and your game suffers. Drills were invented by authors who needed to fill up pages in an otherwise short book, and by instructors who need to milk more time out of a pupil.
There are two exercises (I don't call them drills) that help. The first is the Cosmo. Put the one through nine on the table and space them a few inches part from each other. No clusters. Begin with the one and pay close attention to your position play. When you run your first nine balls go buy yourself a beer.
The second is Put Another One Out. Put the nine ball on the table and make it. Place the nine back on the table along with the eight. Make the eight, and then the nine. Put the eight and nine back and add the seven ball. Make the seven, eight, and nine. Put them back and add the six. Do you see where I'm going with this?
If you miss anywhere along the line, start over. When you run them all, buy yourself a beer.
Most of all, play pool. Play anybody and everybody. Pool should be fun. Good luck.![]()
The same. Nick won a race to 3 in a funsie event and Landon won 15-3 in a tough professional event against Strickland.
i think i would develop a feel for angles and aiming before getting a "system"
also as a beginner I would spend ALOT of time on stroke drills/development
since the house is only as strong as its foundation
jmho
icbw
I am of the belief that most of us here actually aim better than we think. It's the whole process of actually shooting that short-circuits us from time to time.
One way to test this is to arrange some balls about a half-diamond away from the foot rail, and place the CB about a diamond or two away, just so that you cannot reach and make a bridge. Now, attempt to pocket the balls one-handed. You'll have to hold the cue near the end of the butt, and hit the CB dead center. With a little practice steadying your hand and just pushing the cue tip straight through the center of the CB, you'll find you'll make a majority if not every shot, regardless of thinness of cut.
Sometimes, it's when we add the bridge hand that things change, mainly because we haven't aligned our bodies to the shot, whereas with the one hand drill, you can take body alignment out of the equation somewhat. When I first came back to shooting, I would jiggle balls in pockets that I thought I stroked well. Turns out I was compensating my stroke because my body was not always in the proper alignment. Which to me means having my back foot in the same plane as my aim line and my front foot parallel to that line. Once my body was in better alignment, those jiggles became clean shots, at least more often than not.
I also find for thinner or longer cut shots, a longer bridge seems to work better for me (I have some theories on this related to the exercise above.) I also find it better to actually set the shot up in reverse - aim the cut as if I was shooting it one-handed while in stance, then build an open bridge below the cue and drop the cue to the bridge.
I am of the belief that most of us here actually aim better than we think. It's the whole process of actually shooting that short-circuits us from time to time.
One way to test this is to arrange some balls about a half-diamond away from the foot rail, and place the CB about a diamond or two away, just so that you cannot reach and make a bridge. Now, attempt to pocket the balls one-handed. You'll have to hold the cue near the end of the butt, and hit the CB dead center. With a little practice steadying your hand and just pushing the cue tip straight through the center of the CB, you'll find you'll make a majority if not every shot, regardless of thinness of cut.
Sometimes, it's when we add the bridge hand that things change, mainly because we haven't aligned our bodies to the shot, whereas with the one hand drill, you can take body alignment out of the equation somewhat. When I first came back to shooting, I would jiggle balls in pockets that I thought I stroked well. Turns out I was compensating my stroke because my body was not always in the proper alignment. Which to me means having my back foot in the same plane as my aim line and my front foot parallel to that line. Once my body was in better alignment, those jiggles became clean shots, at least more often than not.
I also find for thinner or longer cut shots, a longer bridge seems to work better for me (I have some theories on this related to the exercise above.) I also find it better to actually set the shot up in reverse - aim the cut as if I was shooting it one-handed while in stance, then build an open bridge below the cue and drop the cue to the bridge.
As someone that practices and does use one handed shots, I never hold the cue near the butt, but more toward the balance point as this makes it easier to balance the cue whereas having all the cue weight in front of the grip makes it harder to steady.
That's pretty easy to prove.
Place a ball on the foot spot.
Place the cue ball a foot away at different angles.
A novice player will pocket the balls ok.
Now same angles and place the cue ball 4 feet away.
Novice players will start missing a lot .
With distance, the mistakes in stroke and delivery get magnified.
Delivering the cue ball at the correct spot from a distance requires better skill.
We all know know how to aim a spot shot. The pros make it at over 80% clip.
The amateurs, not so.
Is it because of aiming ? When you all you have to do is aim the center of the cue ball to the edge of that ob?
Nah, delivery.
Any pool school or instructor who spends more time teaching aiming systems to pupils who have whacked stroke and psr is doing a disservice imo.
PS
I don't like long bridges anymore. Sorry.
I feel the hit on the cue ball a lot better with 8" bridge or less.
There are only a few places where the right shot line is a half ball hit with the object ball on the spot.That's pretty easy to prove.
Place a ball on the foot spot.
Place the cue ball a foot away at different angles.
A novice player will pocket the balls ok.
Now same angles and place the cue ball 4 feet away.
Novice players will start missing a lot .
With distance, the mistakes in stroke and delivery get magnified.
Delivering the cue ball at the correct spot from a distance requires better skill.
We all know know how to aim a spot shot. The pros make it at over 80% clip.
The amateurs, not so.
Is it because of aiming ? When you all you have to do is aim the center of the cue ball to the edge of that ob?
Nah, delivery.
Any pool school or instructor who spends more time teaching aiming systems to pupils who have whacked stroke and psr is doing a disservice imo.
PS
I don't like long bridges anymore. Sorry.
I feel the hit on the cue ball a lot better with 8" bridge or less.
There are only a few places where the right shot line is a half ball hit with the object ball on the spot.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N920A using Tapatalk
There are only a few places where the right shot line is a half ball hit with the object ball on the spot.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N920A using Tapatalk
There are only a few places where the right shot line is a half ball hit with the object ball on the spot.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N920A using Tapatalk
Can ya post a pic of a 1/2 ball hit?
Don't get fixated on aiming and don't listen to every aiming gimmick out there. It's just as much feel and using your subconscious. I've spent over 50 years in pool halls and there are guys and gals looking for the golden grail. Don't pay any attention to them.
Yep, and this is why FOLKS never improve. For every monster that never took a lesson, nobody ever told him nuttin, he just hit a million balls, there are THOUSANDS who can't run 3 balls, who can't bank, kick, jump, draw, or do a consistent stop shot, or even know about the tangent line.
But yeah, keep shooting for decades until they finally figure out the tangent line all by themselves. Sorry, folks want to get better today, not in 10 years. They are not trying to be pro's, just want to play better.