You will not really see any difference with just one tournament, or taking notes on what other better players are doing. It is a long term experience that take's place regardless if you are even aware it is happening to you.
The story is always the same and I have heard it dozens of times. For me it was I played in a bowling alley. From the time I was like 15 I was the best player there as well in a short time about the best in my town.
There were some very good players I may struggle with but pretty much I had gone way beyond everybody else, no one around there could beat me.
Then I started going to a 24 hour room in Miami where DiLiberto and Mike Caralla hung. Marcel Camp was the houseman along with a host of road players coming and going and I never really went back to my old room much anymore.
It was "Total emmersion education" in pool. You learn through osmosis and don't even know it is happening. A year later and you go back to where you used to play and it is a joke. All the players you thought were so good actually stink, you can give them the 5 ball.
I do not think this kind of improvement can take place in a vacuum, no matter how much you practice or how many videos you watch. You have to get out and be exposed to it on a day to day basis.
One of the things you notice is that when you see and play top players it just rubs off. They make it look easy and your brain I guess says, "Hell I can do that" and you do. It is for the most part an unconscious occurrence, it just happens. In that room I am referring to in fact, even the suckers played good, the place was "Higher education" in pool for anyone that hung there even with no talent.
^^^ This is a very good post for a lot of reasons. I think it points out what I think is what's important which is what do you want from your pool experience. If you want a social experience then play in handicapped leagues & tournaments. If you really want to become great at this game you're really not going to find it in those places though. To really become great it requires immersion.
Find an action style hall and players and dive in. Instead of handicapped leagues or tournaments, get a spot and gamble cheap with action players. It's a different world and you will get better or you will go bust trying. It will teach you how to match up, not only from your experiences but also by being in an environment where you can watch these types of players match up and how these matches turn out.
This game requires immersion, thousands of hours of rote repetition, playing daily, not one night a week on league night and on weekends. Don't have that much time to dedicate to it? Then reside yourself to where you end up between your natural ability & the hours you are willing to dedicate to it because this game is one that truly exemplifies the old saying of you'll only get out of it what you put into it, there are no shortcuts. World beaters are forged in action halls, not in APA leagues, it's just the way it is. There's nothing wrong with that side of pool if that's what you enjoy & all you want out of it. If you want more then you have to put in the time and you'll become far better gambling cheap with great players for your education than you ever will in one of those leagues. Instead of spending your $ on $30 cubes of chalk and the latest layered tip or glove or the ZRX 14 super special turbo charged LD shaft for $200 put that money in action getting the 7 and the breaks from your local shortstop. It will test your mettle and you will learn. If you're honest with yourself, even when you lose you will learn what you really needed to match up to make a game even where you have an opportunity to win and if you don't then you just hate $. Eventually in this kind of competition you'll start to win if you match up properly. As time goes on the spot will need to adjust because you won't need as much weight, eventually to where you don't need any. This is merely my opinion, it was the way I got my education, I paid for it and paid my dues. I know there are those to don't subscribe to the gambling side of pool, but it's where 98% of pools champions started and honed their skills, not in a handicapped APA 8 ball league, just my .02 cents.