Hey everyone!
I'm starting this thread, because every hobby I've had so far in my life has required me to blog, or write my thoughts down in order to get better. I think that by posting my practice routines and problems for a while, I'll be able to get a lot better. So this thread is quite selfishly just for me. Although I won't mind other people expanding the questions concerning my own troubles.
I played my first frame of snooker maybe 1½ years ago. Before that I played 8-ball pool in bars and such (and pretty much sucked at it). This year I started out at a university, and it just so happens that we have a pool table there, so I've gotten in around 500 pool matches. During that time I also played snooker at a local sports bar in my spare time. I obviously got better just by playing (and playing horrible indeed).
Now this summer as I haven't had much to do, I decide to take up snooker as a proper hobby. I bought a 2-piece standard cue (BCE O'sullivan something something - fitted my budget). Over the last week I've played a bit over 15 hours and tried to go back to basics with the help and tips from this forum. It's been pretty hard obviously, as I've had absolutely nothing good in my technique over the time I've played cuesports.
My main problems at the moment are straight cueing, delicate positional play, and simple draw shots. I believe I've gotten close to the proper stance over this week, but the day before yesterday I did some experimenting on my cue action. I was trying to strike the ball off the brown spot in a straight line and come back to my cue. I had a consistent problem where I hit the correct spot on the top cushion, yet the cue ball came back about 3-7cm off to the right. This led me to believe that I was applying unintentional right-side onto the cueball. I read the thread on closing the grip too early yesterday, and got my first heureka-moment. I've been gripping the cue white-knuckled, and once I got rid of this, I managed to get the white back to the tip of my cue in this exercise.
I'm not gonna go much into my positional problems, as I assume I have too much to do with the even simplest of things. Now draw-shots are something I absolutely suck at. I pretty much have no clue what is wrong with my technique on these. I usually end up way short on these shots. For example, when I'm hitting a straight blue to the middle and try to screw the white back into the opposite pocket, I often end up hitting a near-stop-shot. I believe my bridge is OK, and the problem is in delivery. If I try to bring the tip as low as I can (pretty much touching the felt), I miscue every single time. So am I raising or dipping the butt-end of my cue or what? I'd be interested in a basic exercise to practice the draw technique.
And to finish off, here's my usual practice routine. First I do a red lineup, with 7 reds in the middle of the table (1 on the blue spot and 3 to each side approximately 5cm apart). In this particular practice, I manage to keep the cueball on a pretty tight string. I'm unable to pot them in order (I always overrun position at some point), but do manage a clearance maybe 10% of the time. The next practice is a lineup a pool player taught me. Here's a quick pic I made of it.
I still find this very difficult. Yesterday I managed 3xred, 2xblack, 1xpink but that's about the best I can to at the moment.
Then I try clearing the colours, which I did for the first time yesterday (twice, and once today - improvement yey!).
The last exercise is a spread in the top-end, where I place 5 reds and the black all available, and the pink tied up with a cluster of four reds. Scored 32 with that yesterday, but still have massive positional trouble.
Are these exercises good for a player my level? What other things should I bring in to practice the basic cueing and such? My aiming has gotten a lot better during one week, obviously due to finally gaining some routine and consistency.
As an end note, my highest break in a frame against a buddy is 29 (red, blue, red, pink, red, black, yellow, green, brown). I live in a country where I'll probably not be able find coaching and I also cannot videotape my practice. My goals during the summer are to: correct my cueing, get a break of 50 in practice and hopefully a 30-something in a friendly match frame.
I'm gonna be posting more after most practices, and hopefully find the basic foundations of the game with the help of you guys. Thanks!
I'm starting this thread, because every hobby I've had so far in my life has required me to blog, or write my thoughts down in order to get better. I think that by posting my practice routines and problems for a while, I'll be able to get a lot better. So this thread is quite selfishly just for me. Although I won't mind other people expanding the questions concerning my own troubles.
I played my first frame of snooker maybe 1½ years ago. Before that I played 8-ball pool in bars and such (and pretty much sucked at it). This year I started out at a university, and it just so happens that we have a pool table there, so I've gotten in around 500 pool matches. During that time I also played snooker at a local sports bar in my spare time. I obviously got better just by playing (and playing horrible indeed).
Now this summer as I haven't had much to do, I decide to take up snooker as a proper hobby. I bought a 2-piece standard cue (BCE O'sullivan something something - fitted my budget). Over the last week I've played a bit over 15 hours and tried to go back to basics with the help and tips from this forum. It's been pretty hard obviously, as I've had absolutely nothing good in my technique over the time I've played cuesports.
My main problems at the moment are straight cueing, delicate positional play, and simple draw shots. I believe I've gotten close to the proper stance over this week, but the day before yesterday I did some experimenting on my cue action. I was trying to strike the ball off the brown spot in a straight line and come back to my cue. I had a consistent problem where I hit the correct spot on the top cushion, yet the cue ball came back about 3-7cm off to the right. This led me to believe that I was applying unintentional right-side onto the cueball. I read the thread on closing the grip too early yesterday, and got my first heureka-moment. I've been gripping the cue white-knuckled, and once I got rid of this, I managed to get the white back to the tip of my cue in this exercise.
I'm not gonna go much into my positional problems, as I assume I have too much to do with the even simplest of things. Now draw-shots are something I absolutely suck at. I pretty much have no clue what is wrong with my technique on these. I usually end up way short on these shots. For example, when I'm hitting a straight blue to the middle and try to screw the white back into the opposite pocket, I often end up hitting a near-stop-shot. I believe my bridge is OK, and the problem is in delivery. If I try to bring the tip as low as I can (pretty much touching the felt), I miscue every single time. So am I raising or dipping the butt-end of my cue or what? I'd be interested in a basic exercise to practice the draw technique.
And to finish off, here's my usual practice routine. First I do a red lineup, with 7 reds in the middle of the table (1 on the blue spot and 3 to each side approximately 5cm apart). In this particular practice, I manage to keep the cueball on a pretty tight string. I'm unable to pot them in order (I always overrun position at some point), but do manage a clearance maybe 10% of the time. The next practice is a lineup a pool player taught me. Here's a quick pic I made of it.
I still find this very difficult. Yesterday I managed 3xred, 2xblack, 1xpink but that's about the best I can to at the moment.
Then I try clearing the colours, which I did for the first time yesterday (twice, and once today - improvement yey!).
The last exercise is a spread in the top-end, where I place 5 reds and the black all available, and the pink tied up with a cluster of four reds. Scored 32 with that yesterday, but still have massive positional trouble.
Are these exercises good for a player my level? What other things should I bring in to practice the basic cueing and such? My aiming has gotten a lot better during one week, obviously due to finally gaining some routine and consistency.
As an end note, my highest break in a frame against a buddy is 29 (red, blue, red, pink, red, black, yellow, green, brown). I live in a country where I'll probably not be able find coaching and I also cannot videotape my practice. My goals during the summer are to: correct my cueing, get a break of 50 in practice and hopefully a 30-something in a friendly match frame.
I'm gonna be posting more after most practices, and hopefully find the basic foundations of the game with the help of you guys. Thanks!
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