Here's what Pat Johnson posted years ago on RSB and he was ADAMANT that "FEEL" and "ADJUSTMENTS" weren't good and the game shouldn't be played that way. I do believe he hasn't changed for his own game but it's HIS WAY of disproving and destroying CTE. I can't wait for the double talk and denials. But then again, he'll probably claim the other posters were right and he was wrong back then. IMPOSSIBLE!! He's never been wrong in his life and was the foremost authority in pool back then as he is today. Aren't Google RSB archives GREAT?!!
Newsgroups: rec.sport.billiard
From: Patrick Johnson <pjm...@concentric.net>
Date: 1998/12/08
Subject: Re: Aiming Technique
Dale W. Baker wrote:
> David,
> If this method works for you, so be it. I don't believe there are too
> many players in this forum that will advocate such a method.
Pat Johnson:
This variation on the "ghost ball" method of aiming is discussed fairly
frequently here, and I recall several posters being in favor of it. It
doesn't have a particularly bad reputation that I know of, though it's
not my preferred method because I like to aim more directly at the
object ball contact point.
David:
> The aiming method should be by "feel". You get a sense for the target, and shoot.
Pat Johnson:
I don't agree. It's true that many players aim by "feel," but that
doesn't mean that every player "should" aim this way. And how is
anybody supposed to follow these instructions? "Get a sense for the
target and shoot?" What does that mean to anybody but you? Is it like
"You'll know it when you see it?"
I think a player should have an idea of what he's aiming at, and what
he's aiming at it. For instance, I aim the contact point on the cue
ball (which I have to imagine, because it's on the other side of the cue
ball) at the contact point on the object ball. To help me do this
accurately, I aim the cue stick at the point it would be touching on the
"ghost ball" (this is the imaginary ball sitting in the spot the cue
ball will occupy when it hits the object ball) as if I was shooting the
same shot with the two balls frozen together. (Of course, I adjust all
this for the combined effect of squirt, swerve and throw).
By the way, this isn't a complicated calculation of some kind that I do
while I'm aiming. I just try to point something (my stick and the cue
ball) at something (the ghost ball and object ball), rather than just
"feel" it. It sounds like David's trying to do that, too, and I say
it's the right thing to try to do.
Pat Johnson
Chicago
Ron Shepard wrote: > I think the ultimate goal is to have both sides of your brain telling you > the same thing, all the way from lining up the shot to the followthrough.
> Think of it as a choir with everyone singing in tune. It may take a few > weeks, but your intuition will eventually adjust to reality. Sometimes it > just needs a prod in the right direction from your rational brain. ===
Pat Johnson
This is a good description, and helps illuminate what I don't like about the "intuitive" game. Trusting your intuition (or "left brain" or "instinct" or being "in stroke" or whatever) too often means you're just letting these unconscious mini-corrections cancel out other unconscious errors (in your choir, some off-key singers are cancelling out some other off-key singers). The short term result may be that you're making shots, but it's limiting (it only works with the shots you "know" and doesn't give you a knowledge base on which to build), unreliable (if you hit a slump, what caused it and how do you recover?), unteachable and probably some other things I haven't thought of today. There's a complete sense of confidence when your choir's all singing the same tune that you just don't get otherwise. Pat Johnson ===
More options May 20 1998, 2:00 am
Newsgroups: rec.sport.billiard
From: Patrick Johnson <pjm...@concentric.net>
Date: 1998/05/20
Subject: Re: Last Second Adjustments to Aim
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Ron Shepard wrote:
> I think the ultimate goal is to have both sides of your brain telling you
> the same thing, all the way from lining up the shot to the followthrough.
> Think of it as a choir with everyone singing in tune. It may take a few
> weeks, but your intuition will eventually adjust to reality. Sometimes it
> just needs a prod in the right direction from your rational brain.
Pat Johnson:
This is a good description, and helps illuminate what I don't like about the
"intuitive" game. Trusting your intuition (or "left brain" or "instinct" or
being "in stroke" or whatever) too often means you're just letting these
unconscious mini-corrections cancel out other unconscious errors (in your
choir, some off-key singers are cancelling out some other off-key singers).
The short term result may be that you're making shots, but it's limiting (it
only works with the shots you "know" and doesn't give you a knowledge base on
which to build), unreliable (if you hit a slump, what caused it and how do you
recover?), unteachable and probably some other things I haven't thought of
today.
There's a complete sense of confidence when your choir's all singing the same
tune that you just don't get otherwise.
Pat Johnson