The first advice i ll give you is:
NEVER start counting- don t pay attention about the *numbers*. You have to play it right- rigid and straight. Play the patterns as they should be played- no matter if you re *at 11* or *at 39*.
It s a long road to learn that. A good 30 with a well played safety at its end is better than a 50 with a suicidal end where you just tried a shot from Utopia just to maybe run a higher run. (of course talking here about a *serious match*, not a run where you just practice solo!)
Always play serious. Don t let the fear overtake your game *that the run could end*.
congrats for your new high-score,
Have a smooth stroke,
lg from overseas
^^^ This. I've found my higher runs come from when I "forget" about the count, and just immerse myself into the game -- thoroughly enjoying solving the patterns, and making the break ball to get into the next rack.
I'm not playing as much as I'd like these days (married life

), but when I do play, I match up with a few good players around me, and I find that my best 14.1 comes from when I forget about my opponent, the count, the room, the world, and just concentrate on the feel of the cue in my hand, and focus on the task at hand -- solving those patterns and problems on the table. It helps when your opponent scores for you, so that you don't have to think about it. You're just running balls.
And, of course, in a match, safety play is a crucial skill. "Hail Mary" shots will get you killed in a match, if you haven't clocked the speed of your opponent well enough. Better to turn the table over on a well-played safety, than a "master-blaster" low-percentage sell-out shot just because you wouldn't let go of the run when you should've.
-Sean