Lol. You assume if a player never misses a shot, he would always win. It's not a stretch then to say if a player had a way of aiming that allowed him to never miss, like CTE or advanced fractional ball aiming or whatever, you would tell him he should NEVER lose. Your words, not mine.
You also assume that during my 6 hours of play that day, that I was at the table non-stop, shooting like a pool god on crack while my opponents watched in awe. That's not reality. I've played in several tournaments where I never missed a ball that I intended to pocket, and I didn't win. One of my greatest memories is playing a big 9-ball tournament where I drew Larry Price in my first match. It was a race 7. I broke and ran the 1st two racks, then broke dry. When I got back to the table the score was 5-2. Larry didn't miss, he played a safe and I kicked and lucked a ball in and ran out. Then I broke and ran out. Then I broke and scratched. Price runs two more to beat me 7-4. I remember this like it was yesterday, because Price had recently won the Derby City Bank Pool title and I was nervous as hell. In the losers bracket I drew Mike Cantrel, race to 3 with alternating breaks. I shot twice, a break shot and a push-out. I lost 3-0. Never missed a ball. The total time for both matches was probably a little more than 1 hour.
This last weekend was a winner-stays-up format, aka King of the Hill. Six guys on my table. You lose 5 and you're out. I won a bunch of games by not missing, not fouling, and by staying in line. I lost 5 games due to poor safety play, bad breaks, 9 on the snap, and getting out of line (hooking myself). It took over 2 hours. Then I played several hours of one pocket, we figured it was 28 to 30 games. I never missed a clear shot to my pocket. Don't be an idiot.... banks are not open shots. Some of them are automatic, but I wouldn't consider any bank to be an open clear shot. We played one-hole from about 8pm to 2am. And believe it or not, we took turns at the table. Lol.
If you think this is unheard of, you really need to get out more often. And if you think a pro player has never played hours upon hours with no missed shots, you are mistaken.