Why are Masse Cues not used in normal play?

Lol I was thinking about that after I posted it. There is a simple 2railer.

There's a million shots, that I would shoot, before I tried to masse'.

If anyone wants to play me a set and use their masse' cue the entire match, I'm all up for it... LOL
 
I think Efren is less reluctant to shoot masse shots than most. I've heard that when he was left frozen or nearly frozen to a ball on the foot rail at one pocket with the shot pointed at his opponent's pocket, he just played a little masse shot, circled around the object ball and brought the cue ball back to the foot rail on the other side of the object ball so the balls then pointed at his pocket.
 
Whaaat?! Seriously, that's about as Mickey Mouse as "full" masses get. It comes up sometimes and is worth practicing if you have your own table. Sometimes you will be closer to the object ball at an awkward angle and the masse will be an even more obvious shot. This kind of situation comes up around the side pocket as well. There is even a time-shot variant of this situation, that can be mastered with practice (not as high percentage, but relatively easy and will startle your enemies and amuse your friends). I've started to see shots like this everywhere after taking up carom, which I heartily recommend to every student of the game.I wish I could get cue table to work, I could show you about 10-15 situations where masses come up in regular games. Many of which are safes, and all of which are high percentage for anyone who will pratice them. Sadly, you need to have a table at home for this, because masses are frowned upon at many pool halls.

Masses are a lot like jump shots. People practice them until they can do it at a fair level, then stop. Then when the situation arises they miss and in their minds blame it on being a low percentage shot. What caused the miss was insufficient practice. Masses need a lot of practice, maybe more than any other shot, so understandably not everyone can commit the time. Maybe it's not even worth it if you are a rotation pool player only. If you play Billiards, then it's a different story.

OMG listen.... I'm saying a masse is a lower probability shot then a two or three railer. Im not saying it isnt an option I'm saying if you play the probabilities (which you should) a masse is almost never the correct option.
 
One issue I run into doing a masse with my playing cue is speed. It's really tough to hit a masse shot with precision and put speed behind. And that is something a masse cue could help with.

I really do appreciate the comments and thought it was a worthy topic to discuss. For the most part, it seems to come down to the comfort level of each person as to whether they feel a masse cue could be incorporated into their game.
 
A masse shot I play fairly often is when I finish close to (say 3 inches or less), but on the wrong side of a relatively easy pot. Pocket the ball with masse, which isn't too hard with a little practice, after which the ball reverses direction. My playing cue suffices. I also use them to get out of the odd snooker in 8 ball, where it doesn't matter if you finish close to the ball you want to hit.
 
50 inches long, 21-26 ounces, and a 14-15mm tip. Roughly.

This raises the issue of what's legal. If the tournament, league, or event is following WPA (world-standardized) equipment specs, a cue must be:

• at least 40" in length
• no more than 25 oz. in weight
• no more than 14mm in diameter at the tip

So quite a few massé cues might flunk the weight and tip-diameter limitations.
 
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This raises the issue of what's legal. If the tournament, league, or event is following WPA (world-standardized) equipment specs, a cue must be:

• at least 40" in length
• no more than 25 oz. in weight
• no more than 14mm in diameter at the tip

So quite a few massé cues might flunk the weight and tip-diameter limitations.

Those rules are for pocket billiards. Ive never seen anyone use a masse cue for pool, other than trick shot shows and tournaments.
Chuck
 
Masse cues have no use in the modern game of pool.

If you can't kick or jump, then you are hooked and a masse cue will not help.

I would say the opposite, keep the options 2 dimensional, kick or masse. Pool became 3 dimensional with jump shots and shot quality went down, imo. What would Efren do? Kick or masse, not jump
 
A masse shot I play fairly often is when I finish close to (say 3 inches or less), but on the wrong side of a relatively easy pot. Pocket the ball with masse, which isn't too hard with a little practice, after which the ball reverses direction. My playing cue suffices. I also use them to get out of the odd snooker in 8 ball, where it doesn't matter if you finish close to the ball you want to hit.

If you get time, a diagram of this shot would be great!

Gary
 
Those rules are for pocket billiards. Ive never seen anyone use a masse cue for pool, other than trick shot shows and tournaments.
Chuck


I haven't seen a masse cue used for normal play either Chuck. That's why I posted this thread as a think out of the box thing and to see if becoming proficient with one has value.

Gary
 
I haven't seen a masse cue used for normal play either Chuck. That's why I posted this thread as a think out of the box thing and to see if becoming proficient with one has value.

Gary

While most vastly under use the masse' shot in rotation games, the ones that are feasible are more than capable of being done with a regular playing cue. A masse' cue is not needed for normal play.
 
If you get time, a diagram of this shot would be great! Gary
Here is the shot from Byrne's "Complete Book of Pool Shots". There are 349 other shots in that book you may also be interested in.

Byrne 001.jpg
 
While most vastly under use the masse' shot in rotation games, the ones that are feasible are more than capable of being done with a regular playing cue. A masse' cue is not needed for normal play.


And i'm sure you're right Neil.


Do you think if someone had a high proficiency with a masse cue they could see some distinct advantage in various games by using one?

Or is the reason we don't see them because they are just not practical?

Gary
 
I would say the opposite, keep the options 2 dimensional, kick or masse. Pool became 3 dimensional with jump shots and shot quality went down, imo. What would Efren do? Kick or masse, not jump

It must have went over your head...

I did not imply jumping is better, nor did I ever say anything about what Efren would do. My point was, that if you are jammed up and if the cue ball cannot be kicked or jumped into the object ball, a masse shot will not help. If you can masse into the OB, then there is definitely a way to kick or jump into it. Then of course, how much spin are you referring to as a masse shot.
 
And i'm sure you're right Neil.


Do you think if someone had a high proficiency with a masse cue they could see some distinct advantage in various games by using one?

Or is the reason we don't see them because they are just not practical?

Gary

Masse' cues are very practical for those big masse shots that you see in trick shots. But, those kind of masse shots are not practical in a game of pool.

Once in a blue moon, I do see a shot possibility that would require a big masse. (multiple rails involved) But, too rare to learn how to do it on demand on strange equipment.
 
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