What beginner pool tip do you wish you learned sooner?

The way that Maurice Daly put it is:

"[...] I do not know of anything that prevents improvement, that keeps fairly good players back in their game so much as making the wrong shot and then having it come out well. (Daly's Billiard Book, page 171)​

I met one pretty good nine ball player who shot all his three-cushion kicks hard and with lots of draw. He could sometimes make hits that way. I think it's usually the wrong way to play three-cushion kicks.
I was leaning towards form and stroke. I see some really strange, to me, ways of holding a cue, the bridge, and the stroke. I was instructed by Mark Powell and from what he taught, and what I see, are far different from what he instructed. Brian.
 
I was leaning towards form and stroke. I see some really strange, to me, ways of holding a cue, the bridge, and the stroke. I was instructed by Mark Powell and from what he taught, and what I see, are far different from what he instructed. Brian.
All areas are susceptible to wandering off the beaten path. Sometimes that's good, but nearly always it is a less effective way to play. I think would-be trail blazers should ask themselves, "Why is this a better way to play than what others are doing?" "It's my way," is not a very good answer.
 
The way that Maurice Daly put it is:

"[...] I do not know of anything that prevents improvement, that keeps fairly good players back in their game so much as making the wrong shot and then having it come out well. (Daly's Billiard Book, page 171)​

I met one pretty good nine ball player who shot all his three-cushion kicks hard and with lots of draw. He could sometimes make hits that way. I think it's usually the wrong way to play three-cushion kicks.
I knew a pool guy that hit every shot bottom right, he had been playing that way for decades. I would guess that he eventually figured out he could go 3 rails around the table better one direction than the other, could only kill the cue ball on shots that he hit to the right, and had to cut the ball thinner when cutting to the left vs right.
 
All areas are susceptible to wandering off the beaten path. Sometimes that's good, but nearly always it is a less effective way to play. I think would-be trail blazers should ask themselves, "Why is this a better way to play than what others are doing?" "It's my way," is not a very good answer.
I would add "Why is this a better way to play than others who are running racks on a consistent basis and I'm not? They must be lucky I guess..........
 
When playing league on an away table with a heavy cueball that is pretty much impossible to draw unless you are really close don't even try to draw. Play top only shapes. Which was not my game.
 
When playing league on an away table with a heavy cueball that is pretty much impossible to draw unless you are really close don't even try to draw. Play top only shapes. Which was not my game.

Maybe it's in my imagination, but I feel like I also scratch more using top with those things, like it's a little harder to cheat the pocket
 
A BIG old-school cue ball is HEAVY.
It's basically a billiard ball.

I never had trouble drawing a big cue ball table length on a bar table.
All things being equal, you can get further away from the intended rotational axis. Leverage.
Lot of the issues I had with the big ball were cloth and environment related. On a big table fitted with good rubber and 360, you'd probably have the same options (give or take) as you would with a standard ball.
 
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