I didn't start playing until 10 years ago.. except for a couple years as a teen.
When I started at age 57 I had taken golf lessons for a few years and I KNEW the importance of having the fundamentals done correctly... pre shot routine, set up, back swing, position at the top, dropping the club to the inside line, follow through, etc.
Building on that understanding I figured I probably had learned the game wrong back in 1955 and I decided to begin as a beginner. I took lessons and I was right... I didn't know squat about the right way to approach a pool shot. I drove to Madison Wi, 4.5 hours each way, to see Jeff Carter, as he was the only teacher mentioned by my local mentor, and Jeff taught me the proper fundamentals. I've noticed since that he doesn't always take all of his own advice as he's learned how to adapt those fundamentals to his physical and mental needs and desires. He can do that he's a top pro.
What Scott and Randy, and other teachers are trying to do, (imo) is to show those who are beginning pool how to learn the game and how to construct a solid foundation on which to build their pool game and then when they become more expert they can adapt some parts of those fundamentals to fit their needs and wants. It's a lot more fun to be able to do things reasonably well right from the git-go and fun translates to more play for them.
Like my friend Jeff Carter not all good players follow the spf. They've adapted those fundamentals to fit their game. They have constructed the stance, stroke, aiming technique(s), etc, that fit their needs/wants and they don't necessarily need or want to do everything exactly as it was taught to them back in the day.
Beginners NEED to learn to do it right and then they can adapt those foundation skills to build the game they want to use. They'll pick up ideas from here and there and try them and discard or keep them, and they'll keep doing that as long as they play the game, no matter how good they become, because that's what good players do. They learn and grow and adapt to the needs of their mind and body.
Not all good players will have an intenional pause at the end of the back swing but it's a good fundamental to teach. SPF is an aid to building a stroke/basic game that is under control and repeatable and consistent. As the student's game grows they'll pause even more than they were taught or maybe they'll pause less... even imperceptively.
I applaud the spf guys for getting together and building a set of foundational beginning behaviors for people wanting to learn the game and whose ego is rational to the extent that they can be taught to learn it right.
SPF just rocks as a foundation for newer players to build on. :groucho: :groucho: :groucho: (3 Groucho's trumps 3 taps!... :wink
