Typo in previous post, but corrected.
Exactly the reason I started this thread... I am looking for the more obscure tips for this shot so I know exactly what to practice. Believe me..I will try everything....I expect like all other things that some things will work for me and some won't...I will incorporate what works and hopefully (through practice) will eliminate this current problem.
One of the hardest shots for me (and the one I go "ugh") is when the cue is at an angle to the rail....If the shot is farily straight off the rail (meaning the cue and the rail form a T) I don't have much problem aiming this shot...The more the bottom part of the T (the cue) is at an angle to the rial I seem to have problems lining up this shot and then hitting where I was aiming
I don't have a problem with the miscue and I was alread using a slight elevated cue for the off the rail shot...(although the matching the rail angle is a great idea especially for me as I am very "reference oriented" type player)
It is not the I never make these shots...I just have a tendancy to miss and it usually ends up being a key ball shot in the rack
The kick starter for all this was this weekend at the Swanee...I was down 3-4 in my second round match and ran down to the 9 ball and ended up on the rail with an other wise very simple shot...(I know I am not supposed to be on the rail for a 9-ball shot)...you guessed it...not only did I dog it but I missed it just bad enough to hang it in the pocket for my opponent.
Had I made this shot the match momentum would have been way in my favor...I feel I would have won it from there...Instead that shot gave my opponent new life (and the match away) as I did not get another decent look until I was down 3-7
BRKNRUN:
I just realized, reading back your quote of my post, that I had a bad typo in it. I meant to say "object ball" instead of cue ball in the original, as it should've said here:
...How about incorporating into your practice routine a full diagonal table length shot, object ball in the center spot of the table (dead smack center between the two side pockets), cue ball frozen to the cushion by one of the corner pockets (say, a half-diamond away from the corner pocket on the short rail), and shooting the object ball straight into the far corner pocket?...
Anyway, this is a really good thread -- and brings to light one of those shots that are a problem shot for many a player. It's interesting reading through the various takes on solving it, and it shows the pool playing crowd are a creative bunch.
So while I bring up the point of "why complain about something that can be addressed with a bit of focused practice," I do so constructively -- pointed at the royal "you" (i.e. pool players in general), not you personally, BRKNRUN.
I feel for you in hanging that 9-ball from one of these types of shots. The ultimate punishment. Ouch.
As for the issues with aiming this shot when the shot is not perpendicular to the cushion (i.e. that "T" you're talking about), how are you forming your hand bridge on the cushion? Do you use the traditional rail bridge formed by letting the cue rest on the rail, against your bridge hand's thumb, and your bridge hand's index finger looped over the shaft, pressing down on the other side of the shaft (and slightly pulling in -- but not enough to cause drag)? Or are you using some other form of hand bridge on these tops of non-perpendicular-to-the-cushion shots? Have you tried using some of the other types of hand bridges, demonstrated by Steve Davis in the below video?
http://youtube.com/watch?v=Pfksev2sj0Y#t=321
(The "#t=321" will take you to 5:21 in the video, where Steve demonstrates the hand bridges he uses to address a cue ball frozen to the cushion. You may even want to take a peek at the prior 5 or so minutes, where he goes over the various hand bridges used to address the cue ball at varying distances from the cushion.)
Hope this is helpful,
-Sean