Confidence
I agree with the posts on this. Develop a routine - shoot all of your shots with that routine (easy and hard). The tougher shots should not take much longer of a routine than the easy shots. Same thing with the easy shots - don't rush or skip your routine.
We all want to win, but you can't think about winning. You should be focused on the one shot your are on. To take that a step further you should not be thinking about the pocket or object ball when your down in your stance. Let me explain: With strong fundamentals ingrained in your preshot routine you will already know what shot your taking, where you target is (ghost ball or whatever aiming you use), and you will know the speed and stroke you need before you even get down. So now when you get down you need to trust your routine, aim, alignment to the point where you are no longer thinking about the object ball, but rather all you think about is your practice strokes to find the exact speed and where on the cueball you will hit. Once your practice stroke are smooth and feel at the right speed you just continue your stroke (at the same speed) through the cue toward your target (ghost ball).
If you get use to this and trust your preshot routine then you will shoot with more confidence, smoother stroke and you will jump up less, twist your wrist less and make more balls (because your not anticipating making the object ball). Remember that you cannot "make the object ball go in", the only thing you have control over is delivering a stroke to send the cueball toward your target. Once you realize this and believe it you will see a change in your game.
I agree with the posts on this. Develop a routine - shoot all of your shots with that routine (easy and hard). The tougher shots should not take much longer of a routine than the easy shots. Same thing with the easy shots - don't rush or skip your routine.
We all want to win, but you can't think about winning. You should be focused on the one shot your are on. To take that a step further you should not be thinking about the pocket or object ball when your down in your stance. Let me explain: With strong fundamentals ingrained in your preshot routine you will already know what shot your taking, where you target is (ghost ball or whatever aiming you use), and you will know the speed and stroke you need before you even get down. So now when you get down you need to trust your routine, aim, alignment to the point where you are no longer thinking about the object ball, but rather all you think about is your practice strokes to find the exact speed and where on the cueball you will hit. Once your practice stroke are smooth and feel at the right speed you just continue your stroke (at the same speed) through the cue toward your target (ghost ball).
If you get use to this and trust your preshot routine then you will shoot with more confidence, smoother stroke and you will jump up less, twist your wrist less and make more balls (because your not anticipating making the object ball). Remember that you cannot "make the object ball go in", the only thing you have control over is delivering a stroke to send the cueball toward your target. Once you realize this and believe it you will see a change in your game.