I've been playing pool for 8 years. I have a great instructor that I see often and access to some excellent players, but still wasn't happy with my game. The past year I've decided to learn how to play one pocket. I don't just mean learn the rules, I mean really learn how to play. I started by buying/borrowing DVD's and books, the most helpful so far is the famous book "Winning One Pocket". In addition, I watched every match I could find; I'd turn the volume down, put on some nice music, and pause every shot until I could come up with a guess of what they were going to do. For the first few months I was guessing maybe 1/20 correct shots, but now I'm close to about 80% right every time. Going back to simpler games, now everything is more clear. I can see the players feeling their shots.
I highly recommend any player wishing to improve their pool career, take a break, and focus on one pocket for a while. The shots you're expected to execute in standard situations have tolerances much less than that of a pocket width, aiming wise. More importantly, it teaches you how much mental energy you really should be expending for every shot. The pros are athletes and have simply gotten used to thinking this intensely all the time, its invisible to amateurs. I'm convinced that a good player isn't just a well-calibrated machine that needs to stay on his game to stay good... instead he has learned how to critically think and feel each shot, and then eat a boatload of sweet potatoes in between matches to replenish his mind, lol.
I'll always recommend one pocket to anybody from now on.
I highly recommend any player wishing to improve their pool career, take a break, and focus on one pocket for a while. The shots you're expected to execute in standard situations have tolerances much less than that of a pocket width, aiming wise. More importantly, it teaches you how much mental energy you really should be expending for every shot. The pros are athletes and have simply gotten used to thinking this intensely all the time, its invisible to amateurs. I'm convinced that a good player isn't just a well-calibrated machine that needs to stay on his game to stay good... instead he has learned how to critically think and feel each shot, and then eat a boatload of sweet potatoes in between matches to replenish his mind, lol.
I'll always recommend one pocket to anybody from now on.