This young lady makes 140 spot shots in a row without a miss :yikes::
Video Link https://youtu.be/ZDz9Hqj9KUU
Video Link https://youtu.be/ZDz9Hqj9KUU
This young lady makes 140 spot shots in a row without a miss :yikes::
Video Link https://youtu.be/ZDz9Hqj9KUU
And those were not even "spot shots." She was shooting a harder shot!
Terry...Certainly a great feat, regardless of age. That said, she needs to learn better CB and speed control. She would have scratched on the majority of those shots if she had not grabbed the CB first. Congratulations to her!
:thumbup:
Scott Lee
http://poolknowledge.com
Terry...Certainly a great feat, regardless of age. That said, she needs to learn better CB and speed control. She would have scratched on the majority of those shots if she had not grabbed the CB first. Congratulations to her!
:thumbup:
Scott Lee
http://poolknowledge.com
This young lady makes 140 spot shots in a row without a miss :yikes::
Video Link https://youtu.be/ZDz9Hqj9KUU
Very hard to stay focused to make 140 straight in shots in a row much less spot to spot. Hard to look at the high speed video and determine how many times she might have scratched but the spot to spot shot isn't a natural scratch.
Back in my gambling days when I went in a place and nobody would play for anything, even a beer, I would start shooting the spot to spot shot, missing quite often. I would soon have a handful of people wanting to show me how it was done. Off to the races, a dollar a shot when they hadn't been willing to bet a dollar a game! I would always add that the object ball had to be made without scratching. I knew it wasn't a natural scratch but the other people often found ways to scratch once it was in their heads. Made pocketing the ball a little harder too.
Hu
This young lady makes 140 spot shots in a row without a miss :yikes::
Video Link https://youtu.be/ZDz9Hqj9KUU
Here is part of a Billiards Digest column (May 2018) about spot shot propositions that discusses this exact spot-to-spot spot shot. If you read to the end, you will see why it is very important to slightly alter the positions of the balls from shot to shot if you are going to repeat the shot.
Speaking of records, Shot B shows the setup for what must be the most spot shots ever made in a row. The story, which comes from several sources so it might be true, is that a player named Kenny Kidde and known as “Spot Shot Kenny” used to practice this for hours at a time in several pool halls in Florida. Volunteers spotted the object balls for him and he shot at a soft speed that would just bring the cue ball back up the table, so he didn’t have to move much.
He occasionally got people to bet on 90 out of 100 but he would often do 200 or 300 in a row in practice. His record, set at Hollywood Billiards in Hollywood, Florida was over 1000, and maybe over 1100. I’m told that the owner made video recordings of some of Kenny’s sessions, and I hope a video surfaces. It would be interesting to see exactly what his technique was like.
This particular kind of shot has a gaff. For those not familiar with that word, one meaning is “a handled hook for holding or lifting heavy fish” which sort of fits if there’s a bet on, but another that is perhaps derived from that is “a cheat or a con.” Gaffs are often used in a class of proposition shots that are intermediate between skill shots and tricky shots. In this case the gaff lies in what happens to the cloth after multiple shots are shot along the same line. A shallow grove develops in the cloth that will guide any slightly wayward ball back to the correct line. I have seen this in my own practice on straight-in shots; after a few hundred tries I seem to be shooting a lot better but really the table was helping more. The effect is probably larger on napped cloth than on modern worsted cloths.
The gaff groove also shows up on snooker tables from the black spot to the two corners.
Not to mention, the point of the shot isn't cueball control its ball pocketing.
If Scott is so great, let him get up there and shoot that shot 140 times in a row without missing, or any of his students.
He's got action whenever he's ready.
Jason
Jason
Not to mention, the point of the shot isn't cueball control its ball pocketing.
If Scott is so great, let him get up there and shoot that shot 140 times in a row without missing, or any of his students.
He's got action whenever he's ready.
Jason
Jason
I don't know what video you watched to claim she would have scratched on 71 or more of those shots. 1-11, the ball was barely getting back to her when she helped it with her cue. Her assistant started to push the ball to her faster on 12 to speed up the exercise.
13, 23, 28, 33, 43, 53, 63, 73, .... (see a pattern here...I invite you to look at 83, 93, 103, etc) the cueball came to a complete stop all on its own. None of them scratched. 113 is the only shot where the cue ball was even close to the corner pocket. Most of the shots, the cue ball stopped near where she shot from, or near the center of the table. The spread of the stoppage could have been tighter, but claiming she would have scratched on the majority of the shots if she had not stopped the cueball is ridiculous.
You want to try your analysis again?
View attachment 517807
Thank you...thank you...thank you...... for saying what needed to be said.
:clapping: