Lmao look who's talkingfilm yourself and lets see it. maybe you have health problems that should be treated by a professional.

Lmao look who's talkingfilm yourself and lets see it. maybe you have health problems that should be treated by a professional.
That has to be the worst advice ever.It makes no sense to practice shots I know. its like hearing an engineer say water is wet.
I did that after 5 back operations. Rebuilt everything.I severely injured my back in 2012, between the pain, nerve damage and pain pills I finally gave up playing. After they changed my mess I started shooting again....couldn't play to save my ass. Couple friends have helped me, had to change my stance entirely and start from scratch. Only thing on my side is I know all the dumb mistakes to avoid and what to work on. I'm shooting the best pool I ever have, took a lot of work though. Don't give up, it may suck now but will be worth it
I am 75 and instead of running an occasional 30 in straight pool a goodAlmost a year and a half since I last played. Been playing a couple of times a week for 2 weeks. So 4 times but for long sessions, entire days. Enough to get a good feel for the table, normally. No touch, no shotmaking. Funny thing, can't make a long shot to save my life and keep overcutting shots. WTF is up with that. I've had some breaks in my pool game, this is the longest one, and I don't think my game is coming back this time. It took a long time when I had a 8 month break but this time it's just too far gone. Something has happened that didn't happen before. I'm realizing that my base level is SOO low, there can't be any talent there, what so ever. How I got up to where I was, I have no idea.
I'm realizing that I'm chasing my losses if I'm going after that level again, it may take years to get back up.
Giving it two months, I think. If I can't get to at least get to some sort of runout level, I think I'm quitting for good. No sense throwing good money after bad. I've allready given up on snooker. Tried playing line up, and it was frankly so embarrasing, that I had to quit. I think some of the regulars thought I had gone blind. It's hard to explain how one can drop in level in such a catastrophic fashion. Even with the break, others were at least potting balls. Some players, you couldn't tell had a break at all. Must be naturals, I guess. If I'm going back to snooker, I have to play where nobody knows me or wear some sort of disguise, I think.
I still love the game, but maybe I'll be a railbird from now on. Learn to play better poker, or chess maybe? Thanks for bearing with my long whiny rant.
A ray of light...
Thanks for all the encouraging messages and advice.
I played a few hours today with the intention not to get mad or sad, no matter how badly it went and to make a real effort to play the very best I could and use as much of the advice given that I could. Ok, I didn't play lights out. I experimented with various advice in warmup and played 3 races to 10 against the 9 ball ghost on a fairly tight GC. I lost 4-10, 4-10, 5-10. Using a 3 point rule, 9 on the spot, type break and not pattern racking or soft breaking.
It may not seem too bad to some, but it's WAAAY down from before Covid, at which time I played only against the 10 ball ghost. Believe it or not, but it is also way better than last time I played a few days ago. At that time I'd have killed for this level of play, I wasn't even close. I didn't write down my results then, but I can't remember running more than 4 balls at any time... Some of the stuff you guys suggested must have actually gotten through my thick skull, lol, because the improvement was remarkable. At times I looked like a pool player, and I had a couple of runouts where the ball was on a string, then inexplicably playing very poorly right after. Many of the failed runouts had me making two or three balls. I also missed twice with ball in hand. THAT hasn't happened in over a decade, I think. The thing that is the most puzzling is the fact that to me it seems I'm doing the same thing every time, but I'm getting wildly different results. The template rack was being very mean to me. It was worn out, and kept throwing balls in pairs to the rail, giving me some very difficult runouts, but I did run a couple of the easy ones.
Most importantly, I had a great time just practising by myself. It's kind of interesting to try to figure out what I'm doing wrong, like a little puzzle. Cueball control seems like it's coming back, shotmaking has a way to go. The break has never been a strong suit, and now it's pathetic, but overall I'm playing at a level that is at least ok enough not to make me despair.
I wouldn't focus on run outs. You get pissed you didn't clear the table and impacts the rest of your game and games moving forward imo. As long as your still enjoying the game, stick at it. You mentioned issues with long shots what table size you playing on? Is this different from what you were playing before?Almost a year and a half since I last played. Been playing a couple of times a week for 2 weeks. So 4 times but for long sessions, entire days. Enough to get a good feel for the table, normally. No touch, no shotmaking. Funny thing, can't make a long shot to save my life and keep overcutting shots. WTF is up with that. I've had some breaks in my pool game, this is the longest one, and I don't think my game is coming back this time. It took a long time when I had a 8 month break but this time it's just too far gone. Something has happened that didn't happen before. I'm realizing that my base level is SOO low, there can't be any talent there, what so ever. How I got up to where I was, I have no idea.
I'm realizing that I'm chasing my losses if I'm going after that level again, it may take years to get back up.
Giving it two months, I think. If I can't get to at least get to some sort of runout level, I think I'm quitting for good. No sense throwing good money after bad. I've allready given up on snooker. Tried playing line up, and it was frankly so embarrasing, that I had to quit. I think some of the regulars thought I had gone blind. It's hard to explain how one can drop in level in such a catastrophic fashion. Even with the break, others were at least potting balls. Some players, you couldn't tell had a break at all. Must be naturals, I guess. If I'm going back to snooker, I have to play where nobody knows me or wear some sort of disguise, I think.
I still love the game, but maybe I'll be a railbird from now on. Learn to play better poker, or chess maybe? Thanks for bearing with my long whiny rant.
Allison goes to Mark Wilson once a year to work on her fundamentals stance, grip, bridge, stroke etc. If Allison goes to an instructor once a year for her fundamentals and she has won everything in pool that she could and dominated women’s pool for years then that should tell everyone how important the fundamentals really are. Check out Mark Wilson on YouTube it’s 3 videos that is a little over an hour . If you can take a lesson with Mark.I think this is spot on information. A video of your sessions should help you find the flaw(s) that is affecting where the CB is contacting the OB. Going back to the basics of stance and stroke does it for me all the time.
BTW- I begin EVERY session with CB spot shots up and down the table to level out my stroke and then several long straight stop shots followed by long straight follow and draw shots. ONLY, when I am executing all of these shots consistently do I now feel ready to go after a rack of balls- it really works and only should take about 10 minutes each session.
I recall that one of the great snooker players did not even hit a ball for the first 15 minutes- just used the CB to make sure his stroke was straight- and he was a world champ! The great Allison Fisher, stated that anytime she started to falter in a match, the very first place she looked was - am I cueing correctly, what did I change from before and she was a champ for many years.
Oh good I’m glad it’s coming back. I fully understand. Right now mine is certainly gone. I haven’t played 5 hours in the past 5 years. Probably my longest layoff in 40 years. I know there’s a baseline that I won’t fall below. But it’s scary to see that for a few days. Comes back tho. Faster than it happened the first time learning to play.A ray of light...
Thanks for all the encouraging messages and advice.
I played a few hours today with the intention not to get mad or sad, no matter how badly it went and to make a real effort to play the very best I could and use as much of the advice given that I could. Ok, I didn't play lights out. I experimented with various advice in warmup and played 3 races to 10 against the 9 ball ghost on a fairly tight GC. I lost 4-10, 4-10, 5-10. Using a 3 point rule, 9 on the spot, type break and not pattern racking or soft breaking.
It may not seem too bad to some, but it's WAAAY down from before Covid, at which time I played only against the 10 ball ghost. Believe it or not, but it is also way better than last time I played a few days ago. At that time I'd have killed for this level of play, I wasn't even close. I didn't write down my results then, but I can't remember running more than 4 balls at any time... Some of the stuff you guys suggested must have actually gotten through my thick skull, lol, because the improvement was remarkable. At times I looked like a pool player, and I had a couple of runouts where the ball was on a string, then inexplicably playing very poorly right after. Many of the failed runouts had me making two or three balls. I also missed twice with ball in hand. THAT hasn't happened in over a decade, I think. The thing that is the most puzzling is the fact that to me it seems I'm doing the same thing every time, but I'm getting wildly different results. The template rack was being very mean to me. It was worn out, and kept throwing balls in pairs to the rail, giving me some very difficult runouts, but I did run a couple of the easy ones.
Most importantly, I had a great time just practising by myself. It's kind of interesting to try to figure out what I'm doing wrong, like a little puzzle. Cueball control seems like it's coming back, shotmaking has a way to go. The break has never been a strong suit, and now it's pathetic, but overall I'm playing at a level that is at least ok enough not to make me despair.