Playing solid according to Billy Incardona

elvicash

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
I was lucky enough to slip into the TAR room shortly after one of the big matches at the Derby last week and listen to some dialogue between Cliff and Billy about the prior match. I do not claim to have alot of one pocket knowledge and will not go into some of the details they covered about position and advantage in that earlier one pocket match but what i thought was interesting was that Billy told Cliff you did play good but you did not play solid. What did he mean by that, he proceeded to review a singular position where there were three balls remaining on the table. Two were near Cliffs hole and one was up table. Cliff made a good shot but gave up position when he sent one of those balls up table allowing the opponent to then clear out the remaining ball giving up his hard earned positional advantage . Billy said you made a good shot but you gave up position so it was not a solid decision, to give up the major weight you not only have to play good ALL of your decisions must be solid. You have to take advantage of your position and constantly apply pressure, you have to make decisions and moves to constantly apply pressure. Listening to the dialogue between these two great players really opened my eyes to the game of one pocket. It shows some of what is going on at the highest level of pool, these players were working to analyze what happened and what could have been done to change the outcome. Billy was acting as the Coach/Yoda and Cliff was trying to absorb the lesson. I wish I had a hi caliber player reviewing my matches and shot selection I know the path to solid play would be shorter for me.
 
really....

i thought that was billy, relentlessly breaking cliff's balls, because he was staking him and cliff lost.....LOL.. and cliff handling it like a man.
 
Advantage

It's about maintaining an advantage on the table after every turn. One pocket is a good example, but it can be applied in other games, i.e., 8 or 9 ball, too.

It's about knowing when to shoot a good safety instead of taking a risky shot, maybe one that would throw you out of alignment to run the rest of the table. With that good safety, your opponent has to kick for a hit, and your chances for maintaining an advantage stay on your side.

Know that old saying, 'Offensive wins games, Defense wins Championships', there's truth in it.
 
Thanks for sharing this, Billy is definately an ultra knowledgeable player that knows the game inside and out. This is why I love to hear him commentate, I learn something from him every time. His approach as to why to do such and such is extraordinary.
 
DOn't overthink it...!

I means there were holes in CLiff's game, along with excellence.

The holes were when he left opportunites for the other dude, as in the moving balls and leaving a return bank.

Good pool players turn the table over on their own terms and sounds like Cliff didn't always do that...but did often.
 
didnt dippy win a few games where he needed 2 and cliff needed three? There is no way that is suppose to happen for big money unless Cliff is mentally breaking down.
 
DOn't overthink it...!

I means there were holes in CLiff's game, along with excellence.

The holes were when he left opportunites for the other dude, as in the moving balls and leaving a return bank.

Good pool players turn the table over on their own terms and sounds like Cliff didn't always do that...but did often.


didnt dippy win a few games where he needed 2 and cliff needed three? There is no way that is suppose to happen for big money unless Cliff is mentally breaking down.


I think both of these point out what Billy was saying Cliff made mostly good decisions and he shot well but occasionally there were much better shots available which maintained or increased the pressure. I am sure that anytime the game goes down to 2 or 3 balls Dippy should never win especially if they each need 2 balls. I really wish I had someone review my games when I play 14.1 or league pool in the same constructive manner that Billy was with Cliff. An earlier post suggested that Billy was just breaking balls and I totally disagree, I think they were very constructively trying learn from the experience. Most pool players do not have a coach and I think in this event Billy was post game coaching/reviewing Cliff.
 
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