Your opponent breaks and leaves this. 9' table. This happened to a friend last night (hes an 8 also) and he ran out. How would you attempt this rack?
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Blackjack said:Hmmmm... I would rely on my 14.1 skills. Nuff said.
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cubc said:I guess I need more practice with shots like this. I would be too afraid to miss the cluster by a little since the CB has to travel so far and get hooked on the bottom cluster. I actually brought my cues to work today so I could stop by on the way home to set it up and try it.
I'll diagram what he did in a sec.
cubc said:I guess I need more practice with shots like this. I would be too afraid to miss the cluster by a little since the CB has to travel so far and get hooked on the bottom cluster. I actually brought my cues to work today so I could stop by on the way home to set it up and try it.
Heres what he did.
Blackjack said:This is a perfect situation where 14.1 knowledge can help you out in 9 ball. Sometimes in 14.1, you will get left a crazy break shot that is going away from the rack.
EDITED AFTER SEEING WHAT HE DID:
Yeah, that's kind of dangerous because you are letting go of the cue ball. In this situation, I want the cue ball to stay above the 2 - that's just a straight pool player's preference, you always want to be shooting at those two corner pockets - its a dead give away to spotting a good straight pool player.
Patrick Johnson said:I'd take the simpler route (I assume this is what Blackjack is talking about)
pj
chgo
olauzon said:i was a little miffed at blackjacks hit on whitey vs it's route; not disagreeing, just didn't see it. what's your contact point there pj?
olauzon said:i was a little miffed at blackjacks hit on whitey vs it's route; not disagreeing, just didn't see it. what's your contact point there pj?
JMS said:First off who gave the 80 yr old lady a slug rack?