worriedbeef said:SVB just practiced and practiced by himself i think. Self taught (for the most part of course).
Shane's mom (Timi Bloomberg) was a well known player on the national level back in the 1980's. Shane comes from a long line of pool players, mostly champions at different levels of the game - so self taught? Doubtful - but I am sure that Shane inherited 20 times the amount of natural ability that most us don't have.
worriedbeef said:yeah i was aware of his family history. I was thinking about what i heard danny D say in this clip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlnImyaj1iM (2 mins 57)
Self-taught maybe a bit much, but to get to his level without playing the big boys that much seems to be quite an achievement.
You could play Johnnyt and might have a chance. With Johnny A...not so much. Johnnytcrawfish said:NOONE taught themself. It would be impossible. We need practice partners, good competition, and opponents to excel. How much we absorb is up to each individual. The only way to achieve, at an early age, what some of these guys did is through competition. You can hit balls all day long; but, without competition of some sort, you won't get better. We pick up little nuances, and habits, and learn certain situational play ONLY from other people. All of our pool experiences shape and mold us. Now, I know some people just "see" things more clearly, and some people need less effort to reach a high level (just through natural God given gifts). I just don't believe you could ever pick up a cue for the first time, lock yourself away, and come out of that room and play Johnny. Impossible. Our influences, decisions, confidence, play under pressure, etc. all make us into whatever level we are.
crawfish said:NOONE taught themself. It would be impossible. We need practice partners, good competition, and opponents to excel. How much we absorb is up to each individual. The only way to achieve, at an early age, what some of these guys did is through competition. You can hit balls all day long; but, without competition of some sort, you won't get better. We pick up little nuances, and habits, and learn certain situational play ONLY from other people. All of our pool experiences shape and mold us. Now, I know some people just "see" things more clearly, and some people need less effort to reach a high level (just through natural God given gifts). I just don't believe you could ever pick up a cue for the first time, lock yourself away, and come out of that room and play Johnny. Impossible. Our influences, decisions, confidence, play under pressure, etc. all make us into whatever level we are.
Jay Swanson?Fatboy said:Archer is self taught,
Blackjack said:Mizerak had many teachers, mainly his dad.
I have done several interviews with Shane and just BS'ed with him a bunch. He says his granfather taught him the game but that he pretty much learned most of it by watching and practicing.worriedbeef said:SVB just practiced and practiced by himself i think. Self taught (for the most part of course).
No, that would mean that he was given an answer to a question. Like, "How do I get the cueball to reverse and break that out?" "AhA, thanks for that answer Mr. Player that I have just witnessed doing just that." Self taught would mean you figured it out yourself, not by watching another player. Then, can you do it under pressure in hostile surroundings? That has to be taught, also.alstl said:I guess that depends on how you define self taught. Efren says nobody taught him how to play but when he saw somebody make a good shot he would practice it. I think you could call that self taught since he didn't have a teacher giving him lessons.
JCIN said:I have done several interviews with Shane and just BS'ed with him a bunch. He says his granfather taught him the game but that he pretty much learned most of it by watching and practicing.
Kid loves him some practice.
Some of the coolest time I have ever spent in a pool room has been in Lucky's in Sioux Falls in this old ass rock wall basement with no one in it but Shane practicing by himself. I would just watch as he would break and run out. The only sound being the balls as they went in the pockets and the crash when he broke.worriedbeef said:i can believe him when he says he just practiced.
watching him warm up for all his action report matches - you just get the impression he could hit balls all day and not get bored, and stay completely focussed. and still play a long set afterwards. even his breaking. i saw him hit about twenty breaks at least warming up, constantly re-racking the balls. i get pissed off racking the balls again on the second or third time, and i love to play.
obviously all the pro's love the game, but with shane you just get the feeling he loves it a little bit more than most.