Now that I'm playing more in leagues now, I've been experimenting with the opening break. Up to now I've had OK to mediocre results. By that I mean the cue ball rests near the head rail, and there might be two possible shots at the other end of the table - no real gimmies, but nonetheless an opening for my opponent. However, tonight I found a break strategy that really worked well in practice, and then in a match tonight it worked like a charm... not a ball to be had.
Below is a Cue Table diagram. I always used to shoot from point A because whenever I shot from B (which is the recommended place) I tended to scratch more. From A, though, the corner ball (one ball) didn't come back to the rack enough. I've now found position C, like a nine ball break position, and the results are fantastic. The diagram shows what I've been typically getting.
I'm using a good amount of right english and hitting the 5 ball thin, like less than a half ball hit. It seems this angle gives lots of speed for the 1 ball so it can get back to the pack, and at the same time the 5 is weak enough to stay hidden behind the pack.
Here's what's bothering me:
1. This works so well, why isn't it the standard shot everybody uses? It isn't just the table because I had equal results on two different tables.
2. How is it possible to get these results from position B?
3. I did notice that sometimes the rack breaks open and balls are left out. Other times it works like in the diagram, perfectly. I've tried various combinations of loose balls in the back row and thicker hits on the 5 ball to see if I can reproduce that bad result. So far I don't know what is causing it. Any ideas?
4. Also, it seems a lot of pros use draw rather than follow on this shot, but I have yet to hear an explanation as to why. I do notice that with draw the cue ball tends to whip around the corner more quickly when coming back up table.
Any thoughts???
Below is a Cue Table diagram. I always used to shoot from point A because whenever I shot from B (which is the recommended place) I tended to scratch more. From A, though, the corner ball (one ball) didn't come back to the rack enough. I've now found position C, like a nine ball break position, and the results are fantastic. The diagram shows what I've been typically getting.
I'm using a good amount of right english and hitting the 5 ball thin, like less than a half ball hit. It seems this angle gives lots of speed for the 1 ball so it can get back to the pack, and at the same time the 5 is weak enough to stay hidden behind the pack.
Here's what's bothering me:
1. This works so well, why isn't it the standard shot everybody uses? It isn't just the table because I had equal results on two different tables.
2. How is it possible to get these results from position B?
3. I did notice that sometimes the rack breaks open and balls are left out. Other times it works like in the diagram, perfectly. I've tried various combinations of loose balls in the back row and thicker hits on the 5 ball to see if I can reproduce that bad result. So far I don't know what is causing it. Any ideas?
4. Also, it seems a lot of pros use draw rather than follow on this shot, but I have yet to hear an explanation as to why. I do notice that with draw the cue ball tends to whip around the corner more quickly when coming back up table.
Any thoughts???