I went through this with Terry a few months ago. I told him I found I potted much better and he told me to try it for a while but that was not the way to play the game. In fact Terry made a post that I had found the right way to play the game and Ronnie and the boys have it all wrong....LOL sorry Terry I couldn't resist. I have gone with the Longbomber action and it seems to be working. I think my main problem when looking at the OB and then watching it after the CB strikes it, I move my cue and try to steer it in the pocket which results in a mess. So now I look at the OB but as the CB strikers the OB I concentrate on where the CB is going and I do not even watch the OB. If I have chose the right line then it will take care of itself and my May concern is the CB and whether it has taken the path I planed.
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" Practice to improve not just to waste time "
" 43 Match - 52 Practice - 13 Reds in Line Up "
http://www.ontariosnooker.club
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cue ball and object ball players
I think it's difficult with still images cos you have to get the actual moment of tip striking the cue ball. I wonder if Chris Henry would be able to show any clearer pictures?coaching is not just for the pros
www.121snookercoaching.com
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Originally Posted by CoachGavin View PostI think it's difficult with still images cos you have to get the actual moment of tip striking the cue ball. I wonder if Chris Henry would be able to show any clearer pictures?
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image.jpgimage.jpgAttached FilesLast edited by itsnoteasy; 19 June 2014, 09:33 AM.This is how you play darts ,MVG two nines in the same match!
https://youtu.be/yqTGtwOpHu8
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Duplicate postAttached FilesLast edited by itsnoteasy; 19 June 2014, 09:39 AM.This is how you play darts ,MVG two nines in the same match!
https://youtu.be/yqTGtwOpHu8
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Originally Posted by lesedwards View PostI concentrate on where the CB is going and I do not even watch the OB. If I have chose the right line then it will take care of itself .
I have found in this game the most important aspect is the pot. at least if you pot you have another shot. what's the point getting perfect position if you miss the pot. this is where I have changed my priorities.
once you are a very good potter (which to be honest you couldn't say you are at the moment) and are confident that you will pot 90% of the time then you can work on position. I have found time and time again I was getting the position almost spot on or very close but missed the pot. and when I say miss I'm not talking 4-5 inches I'm talking mm i.e hitting the inside of the jaw so there isn't much difference in the cueball path had it gone in.
I'm of the opinion of Vmax and the majority of textbooks/ coaches and pros, at the moment of strike you need to be focussed on the contact point of the object ball.
I know what you are saying when you say if you have selected the correct line for the cueball to hit the OB why would you need to look at it, however what if you have selected the wrong line how would you know? what mechanism do you have for correcting it? how do you know by how much you have missed? how can you learn from your error?
by not looking at the OB you are not giving your brain the information so it can adjust. Also for arguments sake even if you have made the pot, sometimes the margins are quite generous in an open pocket. the cueball direction can differ by a few feet depending which side of the pocket it went in. also you might make a pot on a table that has generous size pockets and then when you play on a tighter table you'll keep hitting the jaw and keep wondering why
take a look at this exercise by Nic Barrow listen to what he's saying about learning the path of the cueball, how we learn from our errors and check out the difference it make where the cueball ends up. http://youtu.be/V38GvwweYug
all this not looking at the OB (sorry cueball) just doesn't make sense, yes you need to look at the cueball to make sure you are striking it in the correct place but that's during feathering (if you do feather) and at the final pause, so as long as you are still and your grip is loose there is no reason why the tip shouldn't hit the selected point on the cueball.Last edited by alabadi; 19 June 2014, 11:13 AM.
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Originally Posted by alabadi View Postyou can use the same analogy for the cueball. if you have selected the correct height/spin and power the cueball will go where you want. after the cueball has left you cue you have no control.
I have found in this game the most important aspect is the pot. at least if you pot you have another shot. what's the point getting perfect position if you miss the pot. this is where I have changed my priorities. once you are a very good potter (which to be honest you couldn't say you are at the moment) and are confident that you will pot then you can work on position.
Originally Posted by alabadi View PostI have found time and time again I was getting the position almost spot on are very close but missed the pot. and when I say miss I'm not talking 4-5 inches I'm talking mm i.e hitting the inside of the jaw so there isn't much difference in the cueball path had it gone in.
Originally Posted by alabadi View PostI know what you are saying when you say if you have selected the correct line for the cueball to hit the OB why would you need to look at it, however what if you have selected the wrong line how would you know? what mechanism do you have for correcting it? how do you know by how much you have missed? how can you learn from your error?
Originally Posted by alabadi View Postall this not looking at the OB just doesn't make sense, yes you need to look at the cueball to make sure you are striking it in the correct place but that's during feathering (if you do feather) and at the final pause,
Originally Posted by alabadi View Postso as long as you are still and your grip is loose. there is no reason why the tip shouldn't hit the selected point on the cueball.Mayur Jobanputra, Snooker Coach and Snooker Enthusiast
My Snooker Blog: www.snookerdelight.com
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Originally Posted by thelongbomber View PostMany players become great potters - some even reach a world class standard - but have no clue how they do it. They just say, oh, i feel it, and then i see it, and then boom, the ball goes in.
Originally Posted by thelongbomber View PostTrust me on this though: you actually CAN get position, and CAN make the pot. If the pros can do this, so can you. They aren't special or somehow any more super human than you and I. They simply have more experience and knowledge and have perfected the small errors we all don't know about.
Originally Posted by thelongbomber View PostYou first learn by staying down on the shot. You have to see if the cue ball is actually going where you wanted it to go. If it didn't, then you need to analyze body and cue alignment and eye dominance. There might also be issues with the grip and cue delivery.
Originally Posted by thelongbomber View PostI agree with you. But I think what needs to be clarified is that you actually should NEVER look at the object ball, but at the GHOST ball. It's the ghost ball you are actually looking at, even though many would call it the object ball. And so the ghost ball is actually the CUE ball, but at some future point in time.
Originally Posted by thelongbomber View PostActually that's totally wrong. This is one of the most common issues at the amateur level.
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Personally, I have found that as I've got older, my eye rhythm has changed a lot.
When I was younger, my eyes used to dart around all over the place when I was playing, CB, OB, Pocket, OB, Pocket, CB, OB, Pocket. Not necessarily in that order, sometimes I would finish on the pocket sometimes on the OB. The CB was only ever a flick back.
With age (and hundreds of thousands of hours playing computer games , watching TV, using a smartphone and office PC Work) A)My sight has deteriorated slightly and B)I have become lazy. As a result, I have recently found myself STARING at the CB. literally staring at it, no flicking(and I therefore imagine no aiming).
So, I started to consciously try and flick my eyes between OB and CB. Results are mixed, sometimes I feel a much better player for it, sometimes like its a waste of effort and my inconsistency lies somewhere else.
One thing I have found very useful, that links in very nicely with eye rhythm is to slow the whole shot approach down. I like to visualize the end of this break by Ray Reardon. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLDtmdABBwM
The way he casually strolls around the table, has a very slow and precise "Get Down". Just seems to click with me, I have found that my eye rhythm just sorts itself out when I do this(my eyes seem to finish on the object ball pre strike). Let your natural talent flow.
As can be seen by all the videos, not 2 pro's do it the same way. And I would go as far as to say that no 1 pro does it the same throughout a match. This last sentence might sound crazy, but we are human beings, not robots. I bet we could find 2 instances of the same player in the same video looking in different places at different times.
What I would say, is don't change for changes sake, this is a disaster. In a match situation, just play position, try and forget about technique.Steve Davis Technical Articles = https://docs.google.com/document/d/1...ilebasic?pli=1
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I'll just explain what I normally do on the shot.
Once I'm down and I've picked the correct line, I then pick a spot of dirt or a crumb on the table, then what I do is just stare at that the whole time (during feather and on delivery).
What I find with this method, is I'm not worried about the cue ball or the object ball then. I'm basically only concerned with the crumb. So it removes all the anxiety from the shot.
Give it a go next time you're in the club.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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Originally Posted by tedisbill View PostI'll just explain what I normally do on the shot.
Once I'm down and I've picked the correct line, I then pick a spot of dirt or a crumb on the table, then what I do is just stare at that the whole time (during feather and on delivery).
What I find with this method, is I'm not worried about the cue ball or the object ball then. I'm basically only concerned with the crumb. So it removes all the anxiety from the shot.
Give it a go next time you're in the club.
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Originally Posted by Byrom View PostSo if I was going to beat you all I do is give the table a good brushing n clean it well firstWPBSA 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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cue ball and object ball players
my reason for looking at the object ball was to gain feedback about the shot. For example whether I had hit the object ball as intended and the reaction between the balls. If players looked at the cue ball then they would not have this. However after reading people's thoughts on here and thinking it through it would be possible for a player to watch the cue ball on strike and then watch it as it made its way to the object ball. The player would then still get that same feedback about his shot. Knowing this I do not have any other theoretical reason to tell a player to watch the object ball. Like I said before my reason for looking at the object ball was not because this is the target cos I don't believe that I believe the cue ball is the target like the ball is in tennis and golf.coaching is not just for the pros
www.121snookercoaching.com
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Hendry, Williams,Higgins,none of these players mentioned look at the cue ball, they all look at the object ball, and I've heard that they aren't bad at snooker, so I will stick with them, on another note, they all track the object ball, none of them track the cue ball.
Tennis and golf can't be compared, you are not trying to hit the tennis ball off something the same as golf you are not trying to hit another object with your golf ball, so the ball is the target in these sports, snooker is more like shooting, you look at the target, and send the bullet(or cue ball) down your chosen line to hit the target where you aimed, you don't look at the end of the barrel, you could also compare archery or darts, where your sending one thing(the dart or arrow or cue ball) down a chosen path to make contact with a target( object ball, target, or board) in these sports you look at the target not the arrow ,dart, or cue ball.Last edited by itsnoteasy; 19 June 2014, 01:47 PM.This is how you play darts ,MVG two nines in the same match!
https://youtu.be/yqTGtwOpHu8
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