Williebetmore said:Papercut,
I would certainly defer to Steve's opinion. I would think, however, that the percentage of combinations is still somewhat significant, whatever the number. When balls cluster on the foot rail, there will often be a combo that is easier to sink than to try to disrupt. There also will often be balls clustered in the jaws of the pocket. While these are easy combo's, they still count (and many players will not even give them a second thought as they are not fraught with risk).
P.S. - it sounds like Irving attempts 8 combo's in 150 balls; this is definitely less than 1 attempt per rack for those estimating (and I believe there was a rack with multiple combo's, but it has been awhile since I saw it).
Hey Willie... agreed on all counts, except sometimes you might make things worse by playing even the easiest of combos. So sometimes it's worth it to go a little out of your way to avoid even the hanging combinations, because it might mess with the position.
Willie, we should play sometime... you can teach me how to spot those dead ones.
- Steve