It is always with reservations that I subject my own play to the scrutiny of the forum, but I'll, once again, put my own play under the microscope to serve the common good. Go easy on me, guys.
Once again, the game is straight pool. In a practice match against the great Johnny Ervolino, who has multiple three-hundred balls runs on his playing resume, I messed up on the final ball of the previous rack to leave the position shown. I led 88 - 70 in the race to 100, so if I could break this rack open, I had game on the table.
I managed to hit the rack while pocketing the one ball here, but because I played the shot with a jacked-up cue, I didn't generate much power, and didn't manage to spread the balls at all. I ended up having to play safe, and one safety battle later, Ervolino ran thirty and out for a 100-88 win.
When the match was over, Johnny showed me an interesting approach to the break shot shown. Would anybody like to guess what it was?
Once again, the game is straight pool. In a practice match against the great Johnny Ervolino, who has multiple three-hundred balls runs on his playing resume, I messed up on the final ball of the previous rack to leave the position shown. I led 88 - 70 in the race to 100, so if I could break this rack open, I had game on the table.
I managed to hit the rack while pocketing the one ball here, but because I played the shot with a jacked-up cue, I didn't generate much power, and didn't manage to spread the balls at all. I ended up having to play safe, and one safety battle later, Ervolino ran thirty and out for a 100-88 win.
When the match was over, Johnny showed me an interesting approach to the break shot shown. Would anybody like to guess what it was?