ehemm.. I think i've reached the point where I just take the shot subconsciously and the ball just goes in
all I have to worry about is position.

Fred,Fred Agnir said:Don't bog yourself down with numbers and minutia. That's the whole point of the Houle Systems. I only use three points on the cueball, and one point (the contact point) on the object ball. That seems to cover three ranges of cut shots. And I use a bridge length of 8-12".
Fred
Fred Agnir said:Center ball shots should work. Also, once you have the centerball aim, you can pivot about your grip hand (front hand english) with the Predator. It's tough, but that's the only way I know of how to use a Predator with this system if I were to use English. I'd suggest to swap shafts for a few hours. You may never go back.
Fred
Joe T said:Hal the question was how do you aim? Not how you don’t. If you want to show people how to aim that’s great but if you have to tell lies to try and make my method of instruction look bad in order to make yours look good, that’s not great.
Just teach, unless you have some kind of proof that my method doesn’t work. Stop trying to make it look bad just to make yours look good.
If you have a set of my aiming balls you can easily look down and see the contact points are not invisible. They’re very much visible and it’s a very precise method of aim.
I don’t go around trying to bad mouth your method out of respect and I know you’ve had some success teaching it. I’m asking for the same respect.
Yours, a student must be able to recognize angles and then recall your formula as how to aim for that particular angle and it never refers to the part of the shot that does all the work, the contact point on the front of the cue ball.
No matter what method you use the ultimate goal is to get the correct part of the cue ball to touch the correct part of the object ball. I simply improve a players’ perception of those 2 spots constantly and require no angle recognition at all.
Set a ball on the middle of the end rail, place the cue ball in 9 different make able positions and you'll have to teach your students approximately 7-9 different ways to aim them. I'll teach them 1 way for all 9 shots.
I also teach;
Banks, kicks, safeties, combos and caroms all by the numbered contact points.
Where the pocket is, what angle it is, doesn’t matter.
I teach you how to find the answer (what number contact points must meet) and you do your best to connect these 2 matching points.
Hal I’m sure you’re a really smart, sweet, grumpy sum bitch and I respect your years of experience and I’m sure thru the years you’ve shot down a lot of contact point to contact point methods prior to mine with this invisible talk. But mine is new and it’s improved and is a great way to play and teach because it’s fact based, improves a players’ perception and gives the player a true answer to what is really going on.
I offered this to you before and I’ll do it again, A teaching challenge, not a shot making or playing challenge because I know I play better than anyone teaching your method but a teaching challenge to you or anyone you choose who teaches your method, against me and mine.
As Grady would say "I ain't afraid to gamble"
CaptainJR said:Drivermaker this "aiming the center of the cue ball toward the edge of the object ball" is what I said was stupid. And it is. I didn't say that Hal's system was stupid. You all are saying that Hal's system works so I'm assuming that this isn't it because this doesn't work. It doesn't even come close to working.
drivermaker said:Who said anything about that?
CaptainJR said:BRKNRUN said that. And that is who I was replying to.
CaptainJR said:Read my post again. This wasn't something I'm recommending. It was something stupid that I tried for a while 30 or so years ago. The only thing that comes to mind that could be more stupid is thinking you can aim center ball at the edge of the object ball and think your going to make the shot.
CaptainJR said:Drivermaker this "aiming the center of the cue ball toward the edge of the object ball" is what I said was stupid. And it is. I didn't say that Hal's system was stupid. You all are saying that Hal's system works so I'm assuming that this isn't it because this doesn't work. It doesn't even come close to working.
CaptainJR said:Here is the quote. Your name isn't in it. And I have read enough here to know that Hal's system has more to it than just this.
Colin Colenso said:Fred,
I'm pretty sure I can understand you exactly now. And yes, I wish I could get on a table and experiment now. But actually, I believe I can work out most things off the table.
CaptainJR said:Fred's system sounds a little more feasible. He is talking about a contact point. I use back hand enghish and I think I might understand what he is saying. I don't think it works in all cases but could be used as a reference. What I don't like about it is using english on every shot. I try to use english on as few shots as possible.
Fred Agnir said:Then we are at an impasse. No way can you work things out off the table. If working things out on paper worked, then we'd never have to shoot a single shot, we'd simply draw out a ghost ball, hand it to our opponent and say, "there you go, I would make this shot like this. You lose."
This is a very result orientationg game. I've been saying all along that there is an optics issue in aiming. You are drawing things geometrically correct in 2D. The world is 3D with real optical issues.
You cannot work out this system on paper. You are just giving yourself false proof. If this was simply a case of disproving this system geometrically on paper, as a degreed engineer, I would have abandoned these systems before taking a single shot. But I didn't, and I would think the results should speak for themselves. Balls go in the hole, and my opponents are calling me a great shotmaker, something I simply have never been.
I really don't need to see another diagram. You won't be the first nor the last to try those diagrams. Diagrams decieve what is reality. Wouldn't you rather see it on a table?
Fred
Well, you're right. But, if it weren't for threads like this, I'd have no reason to even post on these boards.drivermaker said:Fred...IMO you totally blew it. Yes, you learned from the Master...but you didn't learn enough. As soon as you try to put it down in writing as you have, every math major in geometry, trig, calculus...every physics geek and rocket scientist, or Coriolis devotee is going to try to tell you why it DOESN'T work or won't work. It's not worth the responses and time explaining it.
This is really what gets me. I just request that people try it. If it didn't work for them, that's all that needs to be said. Not "it won't work for me because the diagram I show."Let them call and be at a table...fuck 'em. (remember when you were a science geek and challenged everything?)![]()
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JohnnyP said:JoeT: I don't usually click on banner ads, but I clicked on yours the other night and I'm glad I did.
I wish I could stroke as straight as you do in your demo videos.
Your third eye thingy is neat. My wife has a real problem aiming at the center of the cueball. I must have a similar problem, since the cueball ends up with unintended spin on many shots. Can't tell if I'm swooping or just bad alignment.
I also like your aiming demo. You have a great explanation on determining the contact point on the cueball. I've been playing pool for forty years, and I never realized that this point is on a line parallel to the path of the object ball to the pocket.
Then, you simplify it with the numbers. Match the numbers, and you have contact point to contact point.
If you haven't already, watch the demos at joetucker.net
Colin Colenso said:I suggest that you guys are making some major re-alignments subconsciously to compensate for these variations.
As you said, you have just 3 cue ball aim points but that cannot compensate for the myriad of minor angle adjustments for really acurate play at various angles and distances.
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Colin Colenso said:Fred,
I suggest that you guys are making some major re-alignments subconsciously to compensate for these variations.
As you said, you have just 3 cue ball aim points but that cannot compensate for the myriad of minor angle adjustments for really acurate play at various angles and distances.
The technique I use was taught to me by Efren Reyes. According to Efren, there are three kinds of hits on any object ball. First, there's looking at the center of the cue ball to the point of aim of the shot is a full ball hit. If not, you can divide your object ball into 4 quarters, sighting your cue ball edge to the point of aim.