pooltchr said:At the risk of bruising an ego or two, I can tell you that as an instructor, EVERY student I have ever worked with started at the same point in the class...working on the fundamentals of grip, bridge, stance and stroke. Until a player has solid fundamentals, speed control, tangent lines, draw, side spin, aiming, and everything else is useless. If you can't make contact with the cue ball where you need to make it, and you can't get the cue ball to go where you need it to go, nothing else is going to help.
I have worked with some very strong players, and some that were just starting out. Once we break out the video camera, every student has found at least a flaw or two that needed correction.
Without solid fundamentals, you can't get a consistant repeatable stroke, and that is the one thing we all need to have in order to improve.
Steve
And I'm sure that your method is the best for your situation, but your students are your students, and this thread was started not about students, but about novice players who want you to show them a thing or two. People who aren't going to put serious effort in the game, and people who don't want to sit through lengthy explanations of the techniques that we students of the game find so valuable.
For someone who can't hit the CB in the exact direction they want, learning directional accuracy (without any attention whatsoever to speed control, english, follow, stun, and draw) will take them from making a shot now and then to making a lot of shots in almost zero time. And for most true novice players, that's what they want. They don't want to learn position. They want to make the OB go in the hole, the tougher the shot the better. That's the game to them.
-Andrew