You can hit the ball a few ways and still end up in the same spot. It's one of them feel things. My draw shot isn't that great today so I'm doing follow or tomorrow the follow isn't that great so i'm drawing the ball.There are times when I opt for using center or high inside to go 3 rails over using low outside to get to the same place, seems more predictable speed and distance wise for me.
Then again, maybe that's an indication I need to work on my distance when using low outside.
What kind of spins do players usually use?
I believe that’s the most common kind.Accidental - #1 type of spin used in my case.
Yeah, right….. if we were to watch his famous match vs Mizerak, and did the same analysis that Bob did, I’d bet dollars to donuts it won’t follow his “promotion”.Kind of makes me curious...when CJ was here regularly, he was always promoting his Touch Of Inside, and if I recall, he was claiming that most pro's used it, or a variation of it, more than anything else.
This admittedly small analysis doesn't align with that.
The creator of the iCue practice/training ball (Thomas Van Eck) did something similar in developing his product. But he didn't do an inside vs outside, which I think is valuable. Looks like he also counted kick shots. He was really only interested in spin vs no spin, since so many people think professionals stay on the vertical axis. I wish these people actually would sit at a match and chart it. The players I've heard people say hit "closer to center more often" are Buddy and JL Chang, both of whom actually often go so extreme that it looks like they should miscue.What kind of spins do players usually use? You may have heard that 80% of shots should be played on the vertical axis, but what do players actually do?
I think there may have been a thread like this before but I couldn't find it.
To give an example, I watched a nine ball match between Buddy Hall and Rodney Morris from 1996 and tried to count the time each of nine spins was used. Here is my somewhat subjective result from that match. I tried to figure out how they hit the cue ball from what it did off the object ball and off any rail.
Types of spin Draw Center/Stun Follow Outside 47 11 21 Center 33 14 35 Inside 0 0 11
There were 14 shots that were kicks or jumps that I did not count. I also didn't count break shots.
Conclusions: Inside spin was rare. Draw was more common than follow and center/stun was a distant third. Most shots used side spin by a small margin.
The two players are from a previous generation. Hall in particular has been noted as playing a relatively simple game. Maybe the new crop uses spin differently.
I think it’s more correct to say that better players use more English, no matter what skill level. It’s not like good amateurs shy away from English. There is a progression, and theoretically as one gets better at stroking straight, one gets better at applying English. For someone who can stroke straight and make every shot with vertical center, it would be very odd for that player somehow not to incorporate English by that time.sure pros use more english at times than most players should. big reason is they can use it and not miss the shot. where as regular players will hit more or less and be erratic on it and will miss the shot because of that more often.
with little or no english, if you hit the spot which makes your ball it goes every time. it has to. but with english on it, you can hit the spot and have put a little too much or too little and cause it to miss the pocket. that is a very important difference in center and english.
For someone who can stroke straight and make every shot with vertical center, it would be very odd for that player somehow not to incorporate English by that time.
I find that the people who mostly miss with English also miss with vertical center more often than a “better player.”
If we're talking about <300 Fargos, I'd argue that there isn't a significant miss ratio. But on the other hand, at this level, striking the vertical center isn't guaranteed either.Agreed.
… but those people miss much more often when using sidespin than they do when not using sidespin, and they miss much more often than the pros miss when using sidespin, especially with large amounts of sidespin.
On the surface, it seems this would be true. But watching the pros, I would rarely attribute their miss to "english made this a tougher shot." The pros are using english so often, more than half the shots by any reasonable observation. I'd like to see data.But even the pros miss more often when using sidespin than they do when not using sidespin (for shots of similar cut angle and distance). A sidespin shot is much more difficult to aim due to how net CB deflection varies so much with shot speed, shot distance, and the amount and type of spin.
I think this is perfectly stated, but I think some posters will pick and choose the wording and twist it all up. "Whenever it provides an advantage" - I think better players willl shoot or practice enough with english such that they will more and more understand where "provides an advantage" is, the better they get. Unfortunately, those who stick only or more with the first part of "whenever it's required" while staying with the mantra of "stay on the vertical center" aren't going to get enough practice and real play time to truly understand where the use of english "provides an advantage" even if it isn't "required."Regardless, one should use sidespin whenever it is required or whenever it provides an advantage, but not if you are very likely to miss the shot (due to lack of practice with how to aim when using sidespin over a wide range of shots).
If we're talking about <300 Fargos, I'd argue that there isn't a significant miss ratio. But on the other hand, at this level, striking the vertical center isn't guaranteed either.
On the surface, it seems this would be true. But watching the pros, I would rarely attribute their miss to "english made this a tougher shot." The pros are using english so often, more than half the shots by any reasonable observation. I'd like to see data.
I think this is perfectly stated, but I think some posters will pick and choose the wording and twist it all up. "Whenever it provides an advantage" - I think better players willl shoot or practice enough with english such that they will more and more understand where "provides an advantage" is, the better they get. Unfortunately, those who stick only or more with the first part of "whenever it's required" while staying with the mantra of "stay on the vertical center" aren't going to get enough practice and real play time to truly understand where the use of english "provides an advantage" even if it isn't "required."
I still can't believe the amount of players in this thread that think vertical center "should" be the way to play, unless absolutely spin is needed. That's directed to you too, Dr Dave![]()
… one should use sidespin whenever it is required or whenever it provides an advantage, but not if you are very likely to miss the shot (due to lack of practice with how to aim when using sidespin over a wide range of shots).
Stop shot (low spin hit point, vertical centerline). But that's for a perfectly straight shot with BIH. No one that can run a rack hardly ever plays a cut angle with zero spin.Hypothetical question? Given ball in hand on the money ball, what spin?
It's still wrong. The way you word things its implying that vertical centerline is the primary choice.Did you see this in my post above: