What beginner pool tip do you wish you learned sooner?

First lesson, how to level your cue on the table when taking a shot. Typical beginner error. I see these often when people are hitting the air multiple times after wasting a lo ng time aiming. Also, it helps to start with a short stroke and work from there.
 
Hi everyone,

I've been spending more time researching beginner pool tips, accessories, and game room setups while building a newer billiards resource site.

One thing I've noticed is that there seems to be a lot of advice online, but not all of it is useful for newer players.

If you could recommend one beginner tip, article topic, or lesson that every new player should learn early on, what would it be?

I've been collecting ideas and resources while continuing to build out my site:
https://poolcuehub.com

Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
To me the best pool tip ever came from a professional trainer: stand absolutely still like a rock
 
The stick thing is bs. I believe there are three phases a person should go through.

First, a beginner who is serious about getting better should buy a decent cue that is 18-19.5 oz. Play with that exclusively until they have developed decent cueball control.

Second, it is important to pay with anything. This is cross-training, and will assist in showing flaws and fixing them. It will also show that a cue is just a cue and not the reason someone is a good player.

Finally, the absolute best probably need to stick with the same cue.

If you believe that the cue is much of a factor, you are wrong and will likely always have it as an excuse.
 
It's for bangers. True story.
8 ball is my favorite game. It incorporates all the strategies and is funner to play. Yes, funner is a word. I heard our last president use it. Anyway, keep on bangin pool players. Not everyone can play this game correctly. I can see where they get frustrated.
 
Again i ask
If they are better should a player try to copy it?
No and absolutely no, each has a different stroke, they also have different arm lengths, height, weight, speed of stroke, we could go on but the point is there no "right" stroke, only the right stroke for you, if you are copying someone else's stroke and it doesn't feel right to you it's probably not, the best thing I ever did was go to Dragon Billiards and take lessons from a PBIA certified instructor, understanding YOUR vision center will change your game, I would have NEVER figured this out on my own, when you are sighting a shot it doesn't look any different to me but the results speak for themselves, you may think you are sighting correctly but that 1/4" that I was off has made a world of difference, my shot making has improved dramatically, does that mean I'm almost Pro level now? Not even close, you have to perfect what you learned, Bob Jewett gave some great advice on here saying when you are under pressure almost all people revert back to the way they first learned something, I see pro's every once in awhile stroke incorrectly the same way I do, they play at least a hundred hours a week, that shows just how much pressure can affect your game, I have started playing some racks by myself and been disappointed in the results, my practice sessions have been great but when racking the balls and playing the results are no where as good, it's one thing to have good fundamentals in practice but you must learn how to bring them into a match on demand, I'll keep working on it.😉
 
Hi everyone,

I've been spending more time researching beginner pool tips, accessories, and game room setups while building a newer billiards resource site.

One thing I've noticed is that there seems to be a lot of advice online, but not all of it is useful for newer players.

If you could recommend one beginner tip, article topic, or lesson that every new player should learn early on, what would it be?

I've been collecting ideas and resources while continuing to build out my site:
https://poolcuehub.com

Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
Carom angles - to better have an idea of where the cue ball is headed
 
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Slow down. Take more time between and over shots.
Pool is relatively easy after 40+ years, and I do quite well now that I've slowed my overall pace and am routinely consistent.
Actually, your byline under your username is the best advice. Everyone has a natural rhythm or pace of play that’s best for them, they just need to find what it is
 
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