I was thinking to myself (whilst painting and later gardening) today, that I really enjoy practice by myself. Just me and the balls. Time just flies by, and I get a lot done, and play so many shots, routines and experiements. When I play with some practice partners frames can get very bogged down and 1 or 2 are far too competitive and take winning far too seriously given it's only practice. I know winning is important for folk who also play league, but smashing the cue around and cussing all the time and getting angry just spoils the session for me. And mostly, all the important development I've achieved appears to have be done alone. Now I've got a good set-up, I'm thinking that developing the vast array of shots/break building is my next port of call. There are a lot of routines one can take up to get through all the situations that mostly appear in a frame. There are potting routines, and one can even play oneself, as Vmax said a while back I think (one persona defensive, the other attacking) and keep proper scores. One can also arrange the balls in a variety of scenarios, try and pot a long ball and start a break or being a break in the balls.
I've been asked to play on another league team. It's a big geographical area, and it could take an hour and a half to get to and from matches, and all for one frame, over an entire evening. That's over four hours I could spend with the balls developing more of my game. I'm not even sure I can make the matches on time, due to family commitments. I wonder if it's worth it at this stage of development (3 months into playing snooker seriously) and if I could be more productive building my own game alone, or with a trusted friend once/twice a week, who is a very good player and adviser about break building/shots/position/you name it.
I gave myself a year to see how much progress I could make, to decide how much time after that I wanted to devote to the game Time is limited, and I have to use it wisely, to get the best snooker out of myself so that I can approach the decision about what I want from the game in the best positive light. Thoughts on what I should do gents?
Kind regards, PP.
I've been asked to play on another league team. It's a big geographical area, and it could take an hour and a half to get to and from matches, and all for one frame, over an entire evening. That's over four hours I could spend with the balls developing more of my game. I'm not even sure I can make the matches on time, due to family commitments. I wonder if it's worth it at this stage of development (3 months into playing snooker seriously) and if I could be more productive building my own game alone, or with a trusted friend once/twice a week, who is a very good player and adviser about break building/shots/position/you name it.
I gave myself a year to see how much progress I could make, to decide how much time after that I wanted to devote to the game Time is limited, and I have to use it wisely, to get the best snooker out of myself so that I can approach the decision about what I want from the game in the best positive light. Thoughts on what I should do gents?
Kind regards, PP.
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