av84fun said:Interesting approach.
First, your tactic of APPROACHING the shot and getting down on it in a systematic way is SPOT ON. A lot of errors are induced by faulty set up positions.
HOW you approach is influenced by such things as body type and your stance over the shot. Some use the classic 45 degree foot position while the former snooker champions tend to set up more open.
I tend to set up more open...because Allison Fisher taught me to do that in her and Gerda Hofstatter's GREAT Pool School. So, because of that, I imagine a line running through the CB/OB back to where I am standing and approach the table so that my right foot steps on that line. Doing so sets me up correctly for MY personal stance.
Your approach may be different but the fact that you are approaching and getting down over the shot in a systematic way is GREAT.
As for your system itself, it relies on being able to visualize imaginary spots on the CB and OB and to KEEP those spots mentally there. Some people have more visual minds than others and it is a GREAT skill to have.
And when you say..."I can see where the cue ball must travel in a straight line to make contact with the object ball to pocket it."...that essentially equates to the ghost ball system which works better for people who have visual minds than people who don't.
Everyone can see the ghost ball at first but many can't KEEP the ghost ball (mentally) in place as they get over the shot.
But DO always keep in mind that "geometric" systems are not only fine as a baseline starting point...,they are ESSENTIAL....BUT as Byrne and Koehler point out, raw geometry is not flawless due to the operation of collision-induced throw that influeces most shots to greater and lesser degrees depending on cut angle and the condition of the balls..chalk...powder...hand oil etc.
Collision throw can cause geometric OB paths to vary by as much as 11 degrees and 4 degrees even with clean balls! The compensation for collision throw is to hit thinner so as you continue to develop your system, you might want to adopt the montra..."When in doubt...thin it out" keeping in mind that the throw error becomes more important when the OB is further from the pocket.
Good luck!
Jim
Thank you very much for your insight. I have a pretty decent memory with what I read and hear, my friends actually make fun of me for it. And I have good vision. The way you set up at the shot, where you take your feet positions into consideration, is one of the things they go into extensively in Answer to a poolplayers prayers. And although I have a normal pool stance, I mostly shoot with an open bridge. Its baisically like Wu chia ching's. And im not as (this is a compliment) robotic as the female snooker turned pool players are. Im more loose. Man I hear so much about throw, back hand english, etc. To be honest I can't really even explain that stuff. I mean I get that what you do to the CB relates to what happens to the OB, but that is completely feel, im not thinking about angles or degrees when I need to back cut an OB and drive the CB off a rail to get position, I just do it. I am now a fairly accomplished player, and I can hang with most that ive played on the west coast. It was like night and day when I actually figured this thing out. I (on tight pockets) couldn't make a ball (almost literally). Now I can run out rotation racks (given the right spread) on my table at home with practice pro pocket reducers in the jaws. When it hit me it was like winning the freaking lottery. But in no way do I see a ghostball. I never could, I guess this is like a coach telling someone to do one thing, to get them to do another. In baseball they tell you to throw the knob of the bat at the ball. Which in turn gets to swing level, among other things. Well this equates to what I guess is ghost ball, without actually using that technique per se.