Two other shots are to play off red thinly on the outer side and play the long natural. Some reverse or draw will help if you hit too full but I don't think it's required.
Secondly play across the table to the long rail then the short rail right by the red and then go one or two rails to yellow. This is a pretty standard safety play if yellow and red are reversed. I know one top player who may have never hit the first ball. (But with the drop-in shot above there is no reason to play safe.)
since i cant tell how far off the end rail the yellow ball is its hard to give you a thickness of hit or spin although it looks like the hits will be rather full and it will take a great stroke
could be a great computer shot but not practical...
the concept is to spin out of the corner to diamond 4 and float to the red
here is a diagram for the 2 possibilities i proposed
looks like in the top diagram i drew the line to diamond 5 not 4
but you get the idea
View attachment 440516
View attachment 440517
Here is a drawing of the table. I think the balls are pretty close but maybe BTS can say. Illustrated is the shot I proposed. I think it is possible to get the shot too short. There is a kiss to avoid after 3 or 4 cushions as the yellow ball is flying up and down the table.
View attachment 440525
The upper one is the shot I suggested.
Yes, I have. If you play the shot without side spin it is easy to get the shot too short. I think if you play it with a lot of follow it is possible to get the cue ball to hook short after the second rail and also go short on slippery cloth.Bob, have you ever played the shot you showed in the first diagram from these positions? It is my sense the the cue ball will fall toward the middle of the foot rail after contacting the fourth rail. ...
great wwyd
thanks for posting it
wish there were more of these for us noobies to learn from the discussions
Yes it seemed to bring up quite a bit of attention
Which is a plus for me
I'll do more, had no idea Tom wirth was a 3c man, doesn't suprise me though
I'm only a feel player, and I felt immediately your suggestions wouldn't work, lol
First one came close, but it didn't have the gas to make it, plus yellow moved the red out of the corner, after that I never came close again
I tired them though no doubt, the angle off the last long rail brought it to the middle of the short rail
Yes it seemed to bring up quite a bit of attention
Which is a plus for me
I'll do more, had no idea Tom wirth was a 3c man, doesn't suprise me though
I'm only a feel player, and I felt immediately your suggestions wouldn't work, lol
First one came close, but it didn't have the gas to make it, plus yellow moved the red out of the corner, after that I never came close again
I tired them though no doubt, the angle off the last long rail brought it to the middle of the short rail
IMO, this is the danger of having your own table. If you aren't playing other people you don't learn very fast, IMO. There are a lot of shots in Byrne that I didn't really understand until I saw an opponent shoot it. There are so many variables in a 3C shot that it is very hard to learn from diagrams. I think Tom Is right that many players would lose the zigzag long. But I bet that if we watched Bob shoot it we would see how he avoids that. And learn some things about that type of shot.
I play with guys who for the most part are a little better than me and I learn a lot from that. I also have the good fortune to occasionally play with 12squared, who is a real player, and learn a whole lot more. Some shots cannot be grocked without seeing a good player shoot them, IMO.
I propose 3/4 left yellow, right english, as in
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