Oh boy.
I wonder nobody argues about that with you.
On here? (The Aiming Conversation subforum, that is?) Probably because most readers here use alternate aiming systems, and may've either 1.) never learned ghostball correctly, or 2.) did learn it correctly, but it just isn't the system for them. I wouldn't be surprised if duckie's not the only one who never learned ghostball correctly.
If you think about the term "ghostball" -- it means an apparition of an entire ball. Not a spot on the cloth. Sure, the training devices out there (like the arrow, and other ghostball trainers) will have a "shoot here" spot on them where the ghostball would contact the cloth. But that's not the be-all, end-all of that trainer. The *intent* is to get you to see the entire ghostball, so that your gaze graduates upwards from the cloth, and into the "meat" (volume) of the ghostball. Hence ghost
ball and not ghost
spot. When you're dealing with the volume of a ball (and not its spot on the cloth), you have some checks and balances working for you, like fractional aiming in combination with the ghostball.
John himself proved the inaccuracy of trying to locate a spot on the cloth for aiming:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-L4QMNiVxk
A small error here, at the cloth level, can cost you as much as half a ball of inaccuracy. Why would someone adopt such a method fraught with error? Answer: those who've never graduated past the "shoot here" spot on ghostball training devices.
Duckie, you should really give it a rest.
Agreed -- especially about someone who'd proven he's not a high-level player with what he espouses here, as well as the "tells" in
his YouTube videos.
-Sean