Fvalstounge
Member
I've spent years trying to improve my bank shots with what I always called "off-table visualization" or "Siamese tables". Others call it a "mirror" technique. Over time, I've found I can hit most shots (particularly the harder ones) more often than those who are otherwise my peers. I truly believe this is because it makes you invite the right brain to the party. For most players, it's a left-brain activity of finding an apex to a triangle and aiming for a tiny spot on the rail. With my approach, I visualize an imaginary pocket, as accurately as possible. Not a point in space, but a pocket. It's a large target. Granted, it's just an initial aiming point and you still have to compensate for all the variables, but it becomes very intuitive.
An experienced player has literally seen a pool table from every angle imaginable. Those billions of data points make your mind intimately familiar with the proper dimensions. The key is tapping into that subconscious knowledge, consciously locating where the pocket should be and making adjustments, and then back to the right brain to "see" it. Similar to relaxing your eyes to see a 3-D image, I'm sometimes shooting with a blank, glaze-eyed stare off in the corner somewhere, which is a bit unnerving to some opponents. With full-brain engaged, I use it all to make the shot. The real trick is learning how to exercise and improve those memory muscles for better recall at any table.
An experienced player has literally seen a pool table from every angle imaginable. Those billions of data points make your mind intimately familiar with the proper dimensions. The key is tapping into that subconscious knowledge, consciously locating where the pocket should be and making adjustments, and then back to the right brain to "see" it. Similar to relaxing your eyes to see a 3-D image, I'm sometimes shooting with a blank, glaze-eyed stare off in the corner somewhere, which is a bit unnerving to some opponents. With full-brain engaged, I use it all to make the shot. The real trick is learning how to exercise and improve those memory muscles for better recall at any table.