Colin Colenso said:Yes, my dick is 36 inches long too![]()
Good God man!
Someone should market a new shaft based on Colin.
Those numbers could be used to descibe me too except there's a damn decimal point in there

Colin Colenso said:Yes, my dick is 36 inches long too![]()
Colin Colenso said:To get straight to the point. Efren can't pot well as far as I'm concerned. I'd rank him outside the top 10,000 snooker players as a potter.
wayne said:This has to be the ALL TIME most RETARDED statement I have ever read on a Billiard forum. It is actually cracking me up and I think you must be on Crack or smoking Pot or living in some metaphysical dimension by yourself.
Yeah, EFREN CAN't POT BAlls, there are 10,000 players out there that will jump up and bet against him in a potting contest.
Well I am off to play Efren some, I didn't think I had a chance of beating him straight up but now that COLIN has explained that he can't pot balls very well, I am probably the overwhelming favorite.
Colin, they have an EDIT section, I suggest you edit your post or your credibility on anything you say has just been shot completely.
Man, I can't get over how RETARDED that statement is and I thought this guy was a little knowledgeable prior to this.
(CMON DRIVERMAKER what do you think of Colin's statement "EFREN CAN'T POT WELL", you must have an opinion on this if you thought the other guys statements were weird.)
Wayne
pete lafond said:I think he was referring to snooker players having a more accuracy. I have seen many top pool players fall apart when equipment is very tight. I did see Efrin miss some shots at Turning Stone that I thought he should have made, so didn't other players. His position play and safety play was superior than the rest though.
I took the 10,000 as just an exaggeration.wayne said:Well join the RETARDED list if you think there are 10,000 snooker players that can shoot with more accuracy than EFREN. Give me a break, his statement is so illogical it cannot be explained sensibly by anyone. I can guarantee you that if EFREN had a POTTING contest against the top 10,000 snooker players for $1,000 each he would come out over 9 MILLION ahead.
Wayne
pete lafond said:I took the 10,000 as just an exaggeration.
Colin Colenso said:Thanks for your well written missive Bob.
To get straight to the point. Efren can't pot well as far as I'm concerned. I'd rank him outside the top 10,000 snooker players as a potter.
You pool guys are best when it comes to banks, caroms, strategy, masse, but when it comes to potting you are levels behind the snooker players. Why not listen to what the snooker players have learned about potting?
I don't think Efren really knows what he's doing when it comes to potting and I know that most the snooker players don't know much either. A lot of them will tell you they aim at the contact point, but if they did they would miss. Fact is they just pot by feel. And the top players pot a lot better that Efren or any of you here, I guarantee you.
If you doubt it, get a copy of the World Snooker Championships and watch 30 frames, then go play some snooker and compare. They are 90% on shots that are 50% chances for most pro pool players.
wayne said:Oh, I see, when he ranked him out of the top 10,000, I should have used my psychic powers to determine what he really meant.
Try this on for size from Daryl Peach, former pro snooker player, current pool player, Mosconi cup etc.7.
"Who, in your opinion, was the greatest ever to pick up a cue (snooker, pool, whatever)?"
"Snooker: Ronnie O'Sullivan
Pool: Efren Reyes
Overall: Efren because I saw him play Jimmy White and Ronnie O'Sullivan 6 years ago, at snooker best of 5 for £100 each if I remember rightly: he beat both of them with his pool cue, and he made 3 centuries!! Now that's special."
So, please, do not try to defend the indefensible.
Unless, Efren was using banks, caroms, and masse to play snooker I would say he his quite capable of potting.
I stand by my statement that Colin's comment was the most retarded I have read on here. LOL
Wayne
Yes. Efren was a gold medalist in snooker at the Asian Games.LastTwo said:I've seen him run racks of 15-ball rotation on 4" pockets. Most people would agree that when he is in stroke he can pot as well as any snooker player. Didn't Efren used to play snooker for a period of time?
JoeyInCali said:Yes. Efren was a gold medalist in snooker at the Asian Games.
Played English billiards too.
For the record, Efren told me he can't make money playing snooker in Europe.
Can't beat them, he said.
JohnnyP said:Anyone practice their aiming on Virtual Pool? My computer is a Mac, so all I can get is the four ball demo version of Virtual Pool 1.
The trace feature is pretty neat. It shows where the object ball will go as you adjust your aim.
It's in three D, so it looks pretty real.
No need to edit it Wayne,wayne said:This has to be the ALL TIME most RETARDED statement I have ever read on a Billiard forum. It is actually cracking me up and I think you must be on Crack or smoking Pot or living in some metaphysical dimension by yourself.
Yeah, EFREN CAN't POT BAlls, there are 10,000 players out there that will jump up and bet against him in a potting contest.
Well I am off to play Efren some, I didn't think I had a chance of beating him straight up but now that COLIN has explained that he can't pot balls very well, I am probably the overwhelming favorite.
Colin, they have an EDIT section, I suggest you edit your post or your credibility on anything you say has just been shot completely.
Man, I can't get over how RETARDED that statement is and I thought this guy was a little knowledgeable prior to this.
(CMON DRIVERMAKER what do you think of Colin's statement "EFREN CAN'T POT WELL", you must have an opinion on this if you thought the other guys statements were weird.)
Wayne
LastTwo said:Efren going to Europe and beating all of the snooker players would be like Ronnie O'Sullivan going to the Phillipines and beating Efren and everyone else at 9-ball or 15-ball rotation. No matter how talented they are, it's not gonna happen, because each game requires alot of experience in that particular game to be a great, and enough experience would take years to accquire.
Efren being a gold medalist in snooker in the Asian games I think says enough about his pocketing ability.
Colin one thing for you to look at, is that the snooker players don't use sidespin as often as Efren does on a pool table. I've seen many snooker players make a transition to pool and they miss just as often (or more) than most pool pros do.
Colin Colenso said:That said, in straight up potting with up to half a tip of side, who would argue that pool players are more accurate than snooker players? No one I suspect. So why not use their successful methods as a model for accurate potting and aiming?
Colin, could you elaborate on some of these methods for those of us w/ no snooker background? From what I am getting from most of your post is that the snooker players are much more intuitive. Is this correct? More "feel" players than system players? Is this what you are saying or am I way off base here?Colin Colenso said:So why not use their successful methods as a model for accurate potting and aiming?
Gary,GARY LLOYD said:Colin, could you elaborate on some of these methods for those of us w/ no snooker background? From what I am getting from most of your post is that the snooker players are much more intuitive. Is this correct? More "feel" players than system players? Is this what you are saying or am I way off base here?
LastTwo said:In snooker they lag the ball often so that makes pocketing a bit easier. With a spread in the cherries you have alot of shot options and most balls are ran on one side of the table until all the cherries are down. In the rotation part of snooker, quite often the numbered balls remain on their spot with the exception of one or two, so the runout pattern is not difficult since it's almost identical every time. In games like 9-ball the layout is never the same and you are going back and forth across the table more than you are in snooker. In snooker you almost never have to go back and forth across the table since the 2, 3, and 4 are on one side in the "D" the 5 is in the middle, the 6 on the spot and the 7 on the spot below the 6, so you are basically working your way in one direction to run out most of the time. This is why the snooker stroke and the 9-ball stroke are so different. Snooker requires more delicacy and 9-ball requires more stroke. I'm not saying 9-ball is more difficult than snooker, I'm just saying that the games are very different and as a result require a different style and approach to play well. No snooker player stands a chance against the top 9-ball players, with the exception of Marlon Manalo, but he does not adopt the classic snooker stance and stroke, his mechanics are geared much more towards 9-ball.
I think this is a fine answer. One that has no physics or geometry. And you expect that this "feel" helps you make balls. No logic, or diagrams. No way to convey it to another person.Colin Colenso said:DM,
I would say physics relates to feel as an autopsy relates to death.
You can't do a good autopsy without an understanding of the sciences of death.
Maybe not the perfect analogy, but my point here is that every shot abides by the rules of physics, and can be interpreted after the fact. And that these facts can be useful in recognizing the true paths of balls for future imagination of shots.
When it comes to potting and aligning, the best potters just feel that they will make the shot, and hit it, and it goes perfect.
Let me move to the metaphysical....
I'm looking down my cue at the cueball, and to the object ball and pocket with the aim of making the pot. I ask myself, does this feel like it will work? Is it right? Like the flicker of a candle in my heart I get the answer. If calm I am right, if I feel that flicker then it is not right.
So be feel, I mean that sense of calm, no flicker, not that sense of awkwardness that preceeds so many of our misses. It just feels right.
It is like that feeling you get when the shopkeeper gives you an extra $20 in your change. When you think of keeping it you feel the flicker, a warning of wrongdoing. When you do right and give it back, calm is achieved.
It is much ado about honesty to one's self. Ask yourself the question, is that ball going in, and let yourself feel the answer.
That's about the best way I can describe feel at the moment.
{edited addition}
I will add one more thing. That without practice, which increases the stores of memorization, the signals of feel are weak. They are increased by regular experience with carefull attention to cause and effect. In other words, be highly observant of what happens in practice. It programs the senses that communicate their messages to feeling which store this for later use.