Been using CTE PRO ONE about one hear but still have trouble with straight in shots about 4ft. Apart. I am left hand right eye dominate . Any help?
Can you shoot the cb straight down the table to the end rail and have it come back and hit your tip? If not, work on that. CTE, and straight in shots, are rather "picky" on you having a straight stroke to start with.
years ago I had the same problem.
straight shots were tough.
then i discovered a trick.
assuming that your stroke is straight.
try aiming thru the object ball to a spot in the back of the pocket.
just let the object ball get in the way between the cue ball and the spot in the back of the pocket.
give it a try at 2 feet than slowly lengthen the shot.
Been using CTE PRO ONE about one hear but still have trouble with straight in shots about 4ft. Apart. I am left hand right eye dominate . Any help?
years ago I had the same problem.
straight shots were tough.
then i discovered a trick.
assuming that your stroke is straight.
try aiming thru the object ball to a spot in the back of the pocket.
just let the object ball get in the way between the cue ball and the spot in the back of the pocket.
give it a try at 2 feet than slowly lengthen the shot.
Yes, try this. Mentally draw a wire-thin line that connects the pocket through the OB, stretching to infinity. The line you are shooting the CB down should also be aimed into infinity. When you're close to straight-in, these lines should match up, and you stroke following aiming for an infinitely small point. That is, however, a stop-gap solution.
Ordering your brain to use an 'aiming system' is... well... it's not terribly helpful. You're spending too much time lining your cue up at some spot on the OB, so your primary target is something far away from the pocket, thinking too much about aiming and not enough about controlling. Not to sound all sensei, but every player I've seen develop was able to jump their game up several notches when they stopped aiming the ball at the pocket and started controlling the ball into the pocket using the CB as an extension of themselves, thereby also controlling precisely how the CB will land.
More helpful for controlled pocketing, particularly with small angles, is to dispense with the CTE nonsense, and control the shot using 1) contact point of the CB and 2 the path of the object ball, while imagining its pace too.
When you stroke the CB, if you have solid fundamentals, it should stray no more than than 0.5mm from the path you intend to send it even down a full table length. So instead of aiming with your cue, you aim the cue ball itself, visualizing both line and speed, targeting the contact point where the CB will hit the object ball to to intersect the point on the OB directly opposite the OBs path to the pocket.
Shoot the CB through that contact point, not into it, and calculate the OB to go through the pocket, not into it. You should know the pace spin and angle that the CB will have all the way to the OB and as it comes off it as well.
That will make straight-shots, even full-table-length draws, seem impossibly easy, and cuts will become far more instinctual. It's not a game of angles, it's a game of vectors and friction. You should spatially calculate vectors drawn through points on the ball smaller than your eyes can actually see, and full planning and comprehension of spin and energy. Get your stroke worked out perfectly and you can get your mind off of CTE this-and-that and actually start controlling your shots the way a runout player does.
Been using CTE PRO ONE about one hear but still have trouble with straight in shots about 4ft. Apart. I am left hand right eye dominate . Any help?
.......why??Try always sweeping right to left on straight ins.
years ago I had the same problem.
straight shots were tough.
then i discovered a trick.
assuming that your stroke is straight.
try aiming thru the object ball to a spot in the back of the pocket.
just let the object ball get in the way between the cue ball and the spot in the back of the pocket.
give it a try at 2 feet than slowly lengthen the shot.