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- Consistent control and delivery of the cue
On this point, you must have a reliable and consistent way of getting the cue to deliver down a straight line. Stance, shoulders, bridge hand, grip, Backswing, cue pauses all play a part. You need a SMOOTH consistent delivery, and that comes in many shapes and sizes.
- Shot selection
This is massive. Very rarely discussed on this forum. Almost all players are concerned with their cue action. In my experience, many, many players could keep their existing action, improve their shot selection, and improve massively.
- Use of side
It's mostly discussed on this forum to avoid side, and although it obviously complicates a shot, it is vital you can use it, and also know how and when to use it effectively.
- Practice
If you can't do something, practice it. I often hear people say something like "I can't pot blue to split the reds, I always miss the blue". Well, practice that shot then. Experiment. See what works, what doesn't.
- Stop tinkering
Stick to the fundamentals that work, and do it over and over again. Every time you play, repeat an action that works and stick to it.... DON'T KEEP CHANGING THINGS!
- Years
It takes years to improve and get to a high standard. Enjoy the process. If it was easy, we'd all be on the TV.
Good luck!
There are only a few things which are vitally important and all the rest is just fine-tuning but hardly worth doing. The three things are:
1. STAYING STILL ON THE SHOT, from feathers to backswing to delivery.
2. ACCELERATE THROUGH AND BEYOND THE CUEBALL until the back of the bridge hand hits the chest.
3. DELIVER THE CUE STRAIGHT CONSISTENTLY by monitoring yourself, ideally with video.
Learning the use of side is vital to a player who wants to make high breaks consistently however it should not be practiced until you can deliver the cue consistently straight. Shot selection is the same thing as it has to be learned after you can deliver the cue straight.
Another important aspect is try and think at least 2 shots ahead, when on a red think what angle should I get on this colour in order to get on THAT red. Now this is difficult and always changes because you almost never hit a ball EXACTLY how you intended. Those players who advocate thinking 5 or 6 shots ahead live in an alternate reality where every player can hit the ball exactly how he intended.
- Consistent control and delivery of the cue
On this point, you must have a reliable and consistent way of getting the cue to deliver down a straight line. Stance, shoulders, bridge hand, grip, Backswing, cue pauses all play a part. You need a SMOOTH consistent delivery, and that comes in many shapes and sizes.
- Shot selection
This is massive. Very rarely discussed on this forum. Almost all players are concerned with their cue action. In my experience, many, many players could keep their existing action, improve their shot selection, and improve massively.
- Use of side
It's mostly discussed on this forum to avoid side, and although it obviously complicates a shot, it is vital you can use it, and also know how and when to use it effectively.
- Practice
If you can't do something, practice it. I often hear people say something like "I can't pot blue to split the reds, I always miss the blue". Well, practice that shot then. Experiment. See what works, what doesn't.
- Stop tinkering
Stick to the fundamentals that work, and do it over and over again. Every time you play, repeat an action that works and stick to it.... DON'T KEEP CHANGING THINGS!
- Years
It takes years to improve and get to a high standard. Enjoy the process. If it was easy, we'd all be on the TV.
Very difficult unless you've got someone that's incredibly good to practice with.
I was lucky that my mate has had many 147s, so I'd be stopping him all the time and saying "why did you play that then and not this", "how come you aren't playing this red and you're taking that one" etc.
Depends how much people want to learn. Most people won't play my mate cause they're bored of picking balls out. I just saw it as a massive opportunity to see why he was good and I was plop.
WPBSA Level 2 - 1st4Sport Coach
Available for personalised one-to-one coaching sessions
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Contact: steve@bartonsnooker.co.uk
Website: www.bartonsnooker.co.uk
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