Thanks for all the feedback!
I play pretty good I would say B+ or A . I have ran over 100 7 times so I can shoot.My problem is as soon as i get in any type of tournament I second guess myself so much I play like a D- .I know its all in my head . I dont know what I can do.
Any Advise Please Help
Never quit because you feel that you're not good at something.
You should never quit playing.I play pretty good I would say B+ or A . I have ran over 100 7 times so I can shoot.My problem is as soon as i get in any type of tournament I second guess myself so much I play like a D- .I know its all in my head . I dont know what I can do.
Any Advise Please Help
To directly answer your question...you are probably in the top 20% of pool players nationwide with your skill level.I play pretty good I would say B+ or A . I have ran over 100 7 times so I can shoot.My problem is as soon as i get in any type of tournament I second guess myself so much I play like a D- .I know its all in my head . I dont know what I can do.
Any Advise Please Help
I have competed at many different things, successfully. The key for me is to have a bit of an ego and let everything and everybody else form around me. Your task is to play 90%-95% of your best game. Anybody that wants to win has to beat that benchmark. Since you are playing against yourself it really doesn't matter who you are playing or what they do. This isn't to say don't attack another player's weaknesses but don't care who others think is supposed to win. Play to your expectations and that should be good enough. If somebody else has a better day, so be it. They may beat you but don't beat yourself because you are concerned about what other people think.
Do focus on what you will do. Be careful how you mentally phrase what you are going to do while you are standing up too. "Seven in the side, hit the rail there, there, and there, to come back to the eight is far stronger than seven in the side, don't scratch, get shape on the eight. I often trace the path of the cue ball with my eyes all the way to the stopping point before shooting. Get in the habit of phrasing everything in positive terms all of the time too. Don't focus on what you don't want to do or you will do exactly what you are focusing on not doing.
To repeat the main point, focus on playing your game to your potential. Measure yourself only against the yardstick of the performance you should be able to deliver. Not winning or losing or where you should place in an event but just the level of skill you should demonstrate on the table. Play very close to your best game on demand and you put the pressure right where you want it, on the other player.
Hu