Loun said:if you can shoot long shots id play the 7 straight in the corner with some draw then put the six in the corner by the 8, roll up for some angle on the 3 put the 3 in the corner and get the cue ball straight in on the 1, pocket it in that corner with draw and put the 8 in the same corner.
If you sat him behind the 6 and he couldnt kick off the long rail and hit it then he really couldnt have been that good. If you come two rails at it you are much more likely to hit it and there its anyway to pocket the cue because even if you short it you hit the 6 so it wont scratch in the side. If you hit the 8 and get lucky it could go cross side or tie up the 6.
*edit* if i were to play safe I think I would tap the 3 ball off the short rail and stick the cue behind it (just be careful of the scratch) As long as the cue hides behind any part of that three he doesnt even haev a straight kick at anything. Hed have to go all the way up table withreverse english to even have a chance at its likely hed scratch of giveyou ball in hand.
Shorty said:What I did was shoot at the 7, but just rolled it close to the hole and left him stuck behind the 6, with nothing but a kick at the 8. He scratched off the 6 trying to one rail kick it off the side rail.
Shorty
Jude Rosenstock said:Shorty, as you probably already know, in 8-ball, it's more strategy than execution. The key to winning that game is to not sell-out the 8-ball. It's already tied-up with balls you can pocket so you know you can guarantee another turn at the table, if you need it. If you don't feel comfortable running it outright which is okay (it's important to be honest with yourself in 8-ball), you leave that cluster last and play shots that you're uncomfortable with at pocket-speed, hanging them up if they don't fall.
Eight-ball played right can be as strategic as 1-pocket. With strategic patterns, you can give your opponent multiple turns in a game he is certain to lose and it really does feel better than breaking and running out.
Shorty said:Thanks there Jude...and one day I would love to shoot with you or take some lessons from you. You are a pretty darn good shooter from what I have seen on here and probably be a good person to learn from.
It's funny you should compare it to a run out, that kid was so pissed he would hardly shake my hand...but last time we played he beat me 3-1 on a crap run out. He missed a ball by almost a diamond and it went two rails and in for him to then run out on me. Guess his luck finally wore out?
Shorty
Shorty said:What I did was shoot at the 7, but just rolled it close to the hole and left him stuck behind the 6, with nothing but a kick at the 8. He scratched off the 6 trying to one rail kick it off the side rail.
Shorty
Shorty said:Yeah, I maybe could of drew and got out...but problem is, I can't draw a ball like that. The tables were super fast though. The main thing to keep in mind though is this guy is a 4 just like me in APA. He is really a 5, but recently went down and been kicking everyones backside. He had also already used up his timeout, as had me...so I shifted into defensive mode and made it interesting.
Shorty
Jude Rosenstock said:(snip) 8-ball may very well employ more aspects of pool than any other game and can easily be the toughest to master next to straight pool. On a bartable, the game is just downright beautiful.
(snip)!
CantEverWin said:Not to insult your game at all, but if you are a 4 he made the wrong choice after you made what I believe to be the wrong one. You being a 4 I would take my chances putting the 7 ball on the end rail and making you run out with two trouble balls. ( the 7 and the 1)
I may not play as well as the others here but I have a philosophy that you gave him a free shot. You could run a couple of balls and play safe where he can see the 8 ball and he's not going to make it. 4's have a habit of not making 5 ball outs, even if they are easy. I think you made the wrong choice given your opposition. I don't seem to agree with the rest here, but maybe that's why I'm not the best here.
Mike
Loun said:Mike there are a bunch of ways to play it. He could have tried to pocket the 7 and run out. He could have hid the cue behind the 3. He could have put the 6 closer to a pockey and given the kid a clean shot at the 8... as long as he left him with a longer shot at the 8 theres no way he will be making it.
As far as the other kid goes. He can put the 7 on the rail and make it harder to run out, he could push the 6 down into the 8 giving it some seperation while leaving the 6 and the 1 tied up. He could have kicked 2 rails and made a safer attempt at hitting the 8 without fear of scratching in the corner pocket...
There are a lot of ways they both could have played it. As long as they both realized that whoever broke up the 1-8 would more than likely be the one at the disadvantage in the end then do whatever you think you should. In pool there are a lot of different ways to play a lot of shots... his way worked this time, next time maybe it doesn't there is no way of telling but one thing is for sure. His was wasnt "WRONG" it just wasnt what you would have done.
Shorty said:START(
%AD0Y4%CE5J0%FN2W8%Gg5X3%HE4X9%PG3J0
)END
I was faced with this situation...I had solids and a few balls left as you can see. He was shooting the 8...what would you do?
I will post what I did that won me the game if someone cares to ask.
Shorty
Loun said:...You really want to leave that 8 tied up though in my opnion til the very end in case something happens.