practicing on a small pocket table will improve your game on tight pocketed tables...
PLaying on loose tables and tight tables requires different knowledge and different skill sets....
Playing on tight tables will increase your shot accuracy, just like playing position on smaller tables will increase your positional accuracy...
If you want to improve your shot making accuracy, play on a twelve foot snooker table. you won't make a single shot without good shot accuracy unless the ball is hanging in the pocket.
The problems that arise from playing on tight pockets are there also though.
You'll tend to shoot softer and stay away from the power strokes (which can be hard to learn if you don't practice stroking the harder power stroke shots).
You'll be aiming for tighter tolerances so you won't learn to play the pocket for position which will tend to minimize playing for pinpoint shape, you'll play more area shape.
My suggestion would be to find a happy medium if you're trying to determine what to do at home, or to play on as many different tables as you can while playing close attention to what you are playing on and choosing how you play on the equipment that you play on purposefully...
Jaden
I was just wondering how much will a players game improve if he or she is all ready agood b+ player an is started practicing there 9 ball an 10 ball game on small pocket table? The table specs are 9ft. brunswick , pocket specs: the corners 4 .1/8 th inches an the sides are 4.3/8s inches an he or she practices atleast 2 or more hours a day. Is there game going to improve when they go play on a big pocket 9ft table or stay the same? I know there is some good opinons out there in az land that come from instructors an great players that post on here.: What do u guys think?:wink:
PLaying on loose tables and tight tables requires different knowledge and different skill sets....
Playing on tight tables will increase your shot accuracy, just like playing position on smaller tables will increase your positional accuracy...
If you want to improve your shot making accuracy, play on a twelve foot snooker table. you won't make a single shot without good shot accuracy unless the ball is hanging in the pocket.
The problems that arise from playing on tight pockets are there also though.
You'll tend to shoot softer and stay away from the power strokes (which can be hard to learn if you don't practice stroking the harder power stroke shots).
You'll be aiming for tighter tolerances so you won't learn to play the pocket for position which will tend to minimize playing for pinpoint shape, you'll play more area shape.
My suggestion would be to find a happy medium if you're trying to determine what to do at home, or to play on as many different tables as you can while playing close attention to what you are playing on and choosing how you play on the equipment that you play on purposefully...
Jaden