There are few greater satisfactions in this game than making a century and every serious player that gets into this game, aspires to make at least one. Reaching a century break is no small feat. You need to have some ability to cue, pot balls, and have positional skill to reach a century - it doesn't happen by accident alone (well maybe one shot might eh Mr Thorburne? )
Knowing all this, I still haven't made one - after more than 10 years of playing the game. I took a long break of 4 years from playing prior to 2010 but never gave up watching, learning, and wanting to make one.
This year, I went back to the club, got some tips from a friend/mentor/coach that has seen my game develop from day one. With his help, my game has improved quite significantly and I'm definitely playing my best snooker now. High breaks of 78, 73, 84 in practice, several 50+ in match play. Personal high break in match play 72. :snooker:
When I first learned to play I would "throw" balls in and often hit them way too hard - but I was a potter and could pot anything. I had a personal high break of 72 in match play several years back. This year one of the significant changes I made was truly getting a better understanding of centre ball striking, stun shots, and far better positional play. This has been primarily due to better cueing, slowing down my cue action, better follow through. Slowing the cue action down has helped me gain positional awareness and control. I'm quite convinced from my recent experiences that truly understanding cue action and cue mechanics helps you reach century break capability.
Anyways, getting to the point, becoming much more aware of centre ball striking has done something strange to my game: I'm now playing and approaching shots more mechanically and not playing by "feel", whatever that means. I find potting consistency has stayed level, but breaks don't have an element of "sixth sense" or playing naturally. I'm playing centre ball because it helps pot balls but at some point, I'm wanting to play with side, throw balls in, and play "freely" because it seems to be the barrier I keep hitting.
Question: When break building, are you supposed to play position in a systematic and mechanical way or is there some unexplained force, energy, or "je ne say kwa" that can't be taught? Is break building meant to be 9 parts cueing, mechanics, and logic, and 1 part playing by feel? What's the balance? Are you a cueing mechanic and systematic like a robot or are you meant to reach a point where you don't even see the crowd, feel the cue, and all you see are the pockets getting larger? I know how that feels, getting into the zone from time to time, but is that the point where centuries are made? Someone with actual experience could wiegh in?
Look forward to your thoughts and thanks so much for reading! :snooker:
Knowing all this, I still haven't made one - after more than 10 years of playing the game. I took a long break of 4 years from playing prior to 2010 but never gave up watching, learning, and wanting to make one.
This year, I went back to the club, got some tips from a friend/mentor/coach that has seen my game develop from day one. With his help, my game has improved quite significantly and I'm definitely playing my best snooker now. High breaks of 78, 73, 84 in practice, several 50+ in match play. Personal high break in match play 72. :snooker:
When I first learned to play I would "throw" balls in and often hit them way too hard - but I was a potter and could pot anything. I had a personal high break of 72 in match play several years back. This year one of the significant changes I made was truly getting a better understanding of centre ball striking, stun shots, and far better positional play. This has been primarily due to better cueing, slowing down my cue action, better follow through. Slowing the cue action down has helped me gain positional awareness and control. I'm quite convinced from my recent experiences that truly understanding cue action and cue mechanics helps you reach century break capability.
Anyways, getting to the point, becoming much more aware of centre ball striking has done something strange to my game: I'm now playing and approaching shots more mechanically and not playing by "feel", whatever that means. I find potting consistency has stayed level, but breaks don't have an element of "sixth sense" or playing naturally. I'm playing centre ball because it helps pot balls but at some point, I'm wanting to play with side, throw balls in, and play "freely" because it seems to be the barrier I keep hitting.
Question: When break building, are you supposed to play position in a systematic and mechanical way or is there some unexplained force, energy, or "je ne say kwa" that can't be taught? Is break building meant to be 9 parts cueing, mechanics, and logic, and 1 part playing by feel? What's the balance? Are you a cueing mechanic and systematic like a robot or are you meant to reach a point where you don't even see the crowd, feel the cue, and all you see are the pockets getting larger? I know how that feels, getting into the zone from time to time, but is that the point where centuries are made? Someone with actual experience could wiegh in?
Look forward to your thoughts and thanks so much for reading! :snooker:
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