I don't know what kind of instructor he is, but Ronnie worked very hard on his mechanics so he would probably have a lot to offer in that regard. Anything else would probably be limited to snooker. But ya never know.
I don't know what kind of instructor he is, but Ronnie worked very hard on his mechanics so he would probably have a lot to offer in that regard. Anything else would probably be limited to snooker. But ya never know.
Ronnie actually seems to have a nice instructional style; very complimentary to the student, offers his views as "suggestions" (as well as "why" he feels that way), and is demonstrative with the same.
Here's some video installations of "Ronnie's Cue School" for the young 'uns, but the info is valuable regardless:
Installation #1: The Grip:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=AqgmMfP90Ys
Installation #2: The Stance:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=cUe7NAWW6P8
Installation #3: The Bridge:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=ghZXkpnL7zY
Installation #4: Cue Action:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=pYB2id9qyL8
Installation #5: Sighting:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=BqOsrJJcpEM
I agree with JoeyA; lessons with Ronnie look like they'd be great -- informative, friendly, certainly not boring (he's certainly not monotone) and it appears he would just make you feel good taking lessons from him.
-Sean
Thanks for posting the links, Sean. I didn't learn much new but I enjoyed listening to the way he talked to the young students he was teaching.
I didn't quite understand what he was saying on Coaching 4; at :46 seconds, he said something like, "when you're hitting the ball, you hit the elbow"? I didn't quite understand that.
Anyone who speaks the Queens language, could you help out a mate?
JoeyA
Thanks for posting the links, Sean. I didn't learn much new but I enjoyed listening to the way he talked to the young students he was teaching.
I didn't quite understand what he was saying on Coaching 4; at :46 seconds, he said something like, "when you're hitting the ball, you hit the elbow"? I didn't quite understand that.
Anyone who speaks the Queens language, could you help out a mate?
JoeyA
Not living in the UK I'm just guessing that he means that the elbow and cue ball have to be operating in the same plane - not turning the elbow into the body or away from it. Same stuff that Scott Lee and Randy G will tell you. So you don't need to spend all that money to go across the pond for a Ronnie lesson :grin:
I wrote a blog post in early 2009 about snooker. The full article is http://www.billiardcoach.com/home/2009/04/21/how-to-improve-your-pool-game-in-30-minutes
In it, I mentioned Ronnie O'Sullivan. You could spend hours watching amazing clips of his snooker highlights.
I woke up at 6 am (no jokes please) to watch his finals match in the Shanghai Masters Snooker tournament. In frame (game) eleven, O'Sullivan plays Liang and he does another amazing thing. He makes a break (run) of 109 points in 33 shots without a miss.
What I find amazing is the run consists of 19 right handed shots and 14 left handed shots. He's naturally right handed, but plays better than most players with his left hand. He shoots his first left handed shot on the blue which brings his break to 14 points. As the run progresses, he mixes in his left hand more and more often. He is so natural and smooth, you might not notice it if you don't pay attention. Truly amazing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s39faklrowg
I wrote a blog post in early 2009 about snooker. The full article is http://www.billiardcoach.com/home/2009/04/21/how-to-improve-your-pool-game-in-30-minutes
In it, I mentioned Ronnie O'Sullivan. You could spend hours watching amazing clips of his snooker highlights.
I woke up at 6 am (no jokes please) to watch his finals match in the Shanghai Masters Snooker tournament. In frame (game) eleven, O'Sullivan plays Liang and he does another amazing thing. He makes a break (run) of 109 points in 33 shots without a miss.
What I find amazing is the run consists of 19 right handed shots and 14 left handed shots. He's naturally right handed, but plays better than most players with his left hand. He shoots his first left handed shot on the blue which brings his break to 14 points. As the run progresses, he mixes in his left hand more and more often. He is so natural and smooth, you might not notice it if you don't pay attention. Truly amazing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s39faklrowg
You're absolutely right. That guy switches hands more easily than any pool player I have ever seen. Thanks for the link.
JoeyA