I agree with crackers. Sighting is not really an issue that should be worried about much but it seems a lot of players believe they aren't sighting well.
As proof I had a student yesterday who is just a beginner and I had him trying to pot 3/4 and 1/2-ball blues into the middle bags. I had been working on his grip and timing up until then and correcting some faults he had developed from his first lesson a couple of months ago.
When he started with the blues he was missing 90% of the pots and was getting frustrated and since everything looked good on the technique side I was having a difficult time trying to find out why he was missing. In the end it turned out he had something I call 'presumptive movement' which means he had the bad habit of lifting himself off the shot too early and this movement up was creeping back in his delivery until he was starting to lift before he struck the cueball.
I cured it by making him stay down with the cue extended and no head movement at the end of the delivery, overemphasizing it like Shaun Murphy does. At the end he was potting 100% of the blues and getting position on the pink too.
My point in all this was he wears glasses and is very near-sighted and he felt he was getting the sighting wrong because he was looking through the thicker part of his glasses. As a coach I know the brain will make the correct compensation for whatever problems you have with sighting AS LONG AS YOU DO EVERYTHING CONSISTENTLY THE SAME.
If you feel you are sighting incorrectly then just stick with it BUT at the end of every delivery stay down and keep the head still and follow the object ball to the pocket or cushion. This will give your brain the feedback it needs and it will unconsciously and automatically correct the problem without the player even having to think consciously about it.
Even my newest students have had no problem determining the correct spot on the object ball to pot it and using the 'ghost ball' method they know where to aim the cue correct. The only reason they miss is not because of incorrect sighting but rather being unable to deliver the cue straight.
Terry
As proof I had a student yesterday who is just a beginner and I had him trying to pot 3/4 and 1/2-ball blues into the middle bags. I had been working on his grip and timing up until then and correcting some faults he had developed from his first lesson a couple of months ago.
When he started with the blues he was missing 90% of the pots and was getting frustrated and since everything looked good on the technique side I was having a difficult time trying to find out why he was missing. In the end it turned out he had something I call 'presumptive movement' which means he had the bad habit of lifting himself off the shot too early and this movement up was creeping back in his delivery until he was starting to lift before he struck the cueball.
I cured it by making him stay down with the cue extended and no head movement at the end of the delivery, overemphasizing it like Shaun Murphy does. At the end he was potting 100% of the blues and getting position on the pink too.
My point in all this was he wears glasses and is very near-sighted and he felt he was getting the sighting wrong because he was looking through the thicker part of his glasses. As a coach I know the brain will make the correct compensation for whatever problems you have with sighting AS LONG AS YOU DO EVERYTHING CONSISTENTLY THE SAME.
If you feel you are sighting incorrectly then just stick with it BUT at the end of every delivery stay down and keep the head still and follow the object ball to the pocket or cushion. This will give your brain the feedback it needs and it will unconsciously and automatically correct the problem without the player even having to think consciously about it.
Even my newest students have had no problem determining the correct spot on the object ball to pot it and using the 'ghost ball' method they know where to aim the cue correct. The only reason they miss is not because of incorrect sighting but rather being unable to deliver the cue straight.
Terry
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