Better yet it's the "CYLINDER/TUBE, JEDI SWORD" aiming system
Patrick Johnson View profile
More options May 21 1999, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: rec.sport.billiard
From: Patrick Johnson <pjm...@concentric.net>
Date: 1999/05/21
Subject: Re: Ghost Ball Trainer
I agree it's a visualization thing, and that means it's very difficult
to be sure what different people mean. For instance, I would say I
never use the ghost ball method, and that I always aim
contact-point-to-contact-point. But when I think of the ghost ball
method, I think of aiming the center of the cue ball at the center of
the ghost ball. Someone else might say it means visualizing the ghost
ball touching the object ball (another way of visualizing the object
ball contact point). It depends on what you have in mind when aiming,
which is not often described in detail. Sometimes the words we use (or
don't use) get in the way of communicating exactly what we mean, like
when we use names for aiming methods rather than descriptions.
Just for fun, here's how I visualize aiming a simple cut shot with no
spin (after I'm down in stance and basically lined up): I usually see
the cue ball as a kind of cylinder or tube extending forward to the
object ball, with its diameter diminishing as the distance increases (as
it would appear to if there really was a cylinder there). When aligning
my stick for the shot, I see this tube as kind of a thick Jedi sword
laser beam that moves left and right with my stick until it lines up
perfectly on the object ball. So you might say I use a "ghost tube"
method, but I do consciously look at the object ball contact point and
try to line up the (estimated) cue ball contact point with it. So is
this a "straight shot" or a "cut shot?" I don't know. Is it a "contact
point" or a "ghost ball/tube" method? Search me.
There's lots more that I "visualize" in addition to strictly aiming,
including how I think the stroke will feel (and the feel of hitting the
cue ball), the "drag" the surface cloth will have on the cue ball, the
physical impact of the cue ball and object ball (even the sound it will
make), the curving path of the cue ball after impact, etc., etc. All
this takes a microsecond, and doesn't mean that I'm spending lots of
time "calculating" the shot... it's more like my "intuition" for the
shot just includes lots of conscious physical specifics. I work on
increasing the amount of this conscious detail that I can handle without
it becoming a distraction, because I feel it improves my game, and my
learning curve, tremendously (with all respect to the pure "feel"
shooters).
Pat Johnson
Chicago