I played a friend of mine a couple days ago.
I played a poor safety off the break and he made a 118, with a possible 145 with all the colors on the spot, when he got a kick which caused hsi cue ball to stop really short on the yellow.
I have never really played with my friend before, although I have met him many times and we talked and what not.
During the break, believe it or not, when he was on his last few reds, a lady came to the table with a drink and started talking to her boyfriend at the baulk end, while my friend was taking care of business around the black. I watched my friend to see what he would do (and to see if I shoudl step in to ask them to leave the table), just to find that his eyes never left the balls! I dont think he honestly knew that there was a girl leaning on the table at the other end.
That is some focus, and a good lesson for me.
Besides, I noticed that he has a very simple cueing action, by which I mean he would step in line and then just got down and shoot after a few feathers, with almost no unwanted movement with his body or his grip. After watching him play closely, I realize his motion is so economical, that it makes his cueing arm very consistent. His approach to the table is also very simple, but his body must be in line while he got down, which is not easy to do consistently.
Just shows me how much more I need to work on...
I played a poor safety off the break and he made a 118, with a possible 145 with all the colors on the spot, when he got a kick which caused hsi cue ball to stop really short on the yellow.
I have never really played with my friend before, although I have met him many times and we talked and what not.
During the break, believe it or not, when he was on his last few reds, a lady came to the table with a drink and started talking to her boyfriend at the baulk end, while my friend was taking care of business around the black. I watched my friend to see what he would do (and to see if I shoudl step in to ask them to leave the table), just to find that his eyes never left the balls! I dont think he honestly knew that there was a girl leaning on the table at the other end.
That is some focus, and a good lesson for me.
Besides, I noticed that he has a very simple cueing action, by which I mean he would step in line and then just got down and shoot after a few feathers, with almost no unwanted movement with his body or his grip. After watching him play closely, I realize his motion is so economical, that it makes his cueing arm very consistent. His approach to the table is also very simple, but his body must be in line while he got down, which is not easy to do consistently.
Just shows me how much more I need to work on...
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