Great players are great because they put in the time. No one is born as a great pool player. They put in the time and had the right circumstances and mentoring.
That's it.
They can do things that you and I can't because they put in the time to learn them.
Do you think Florian Kohler is more "talented" than you are?
Start at the beginning with his YouTube videos and you will see that his ability comes from huge amounts of deliberate and focused practice. He worked hard to develop the skill to perform the shots he discovered are possible.
Get a pool table of your own, lots of time, no bills, no kids, no wife, no job and an encouraging community of like-minded people around the world posting competing videos to push you and you can be as good as Florian or at least better than anyone you are likely to meet in a pool room.
Same thing applies to regular pool. Put in the time, have proper influences (coaching, mentoring, exposure to great players) and you can't help but get very good to great.
Research has shown that time+instruction+focus is more important than "talent". People who are considered "great" at anything have generally put at least ten years of focused learning and training into it.
The old saying that an amateur practices until they get it right and a pro practices until they can't get it wrong applies here.
That's it.
They can do things that you and I can't because they put in the time to learn them.
Do you think Florian Kohler is more "talented" than you are?
Start at the beginning with his YouTube videos and you will see that his ability comes from huge amounts of deliberate and focused practice. He worked hard to develop the skill to perform the shots he discovered are possible.
Get a pool table of your own, lots of time, no bills, no kids, no wife, no job and an encouraging community of like-minded people around the world posting competing videos to push you and you can be as good as Florian or at least better than anyone you are likely to meet in a pool room.
Same thing applies to regular pool. Put in the time, have proper influences (coaching, mentoring, exposure to great players) and you can't help but get very good to great.
Research has shown that time+instruction+focus is more important than "talent". People who are considered "great" at anything have generally put at least ten years of focused learning and training into it.
The old saying that an amateur practices until they get it right and a pro practices until they can't get it wrong applies here.