Originally Posted by zeeman
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The main lesson I try to get from this exercise is about positioning in a real frame situation. So, it's important that the reds are positioned at random, i.e. not a line-up, and preferably colours on their spots in order for this to work better (plus I am biased against line-ups, balls don't line-up like that during matches... plus I find lining up the balls bothersome). Spread the reds wider for easier clearance, tighter reds if you feel like a challenge. If I do line-ups, I'm more likely to do the reds in sequence. Much more productive that way. It forces you to learn how to manouvre the cue ball that much better.
The straight-ish screw back from the black off one cushion is a tough shot on slower tables, nigh impossible to do on some really bad ones, what with the slow cloth and dead cushions. Pick a nicer table if possible. Then again, you should ask yourself, how did you land dead straight? Got careless? Would it be better if you had bounced the cue ball off a cushion to ensure an angle instead of a slow roll? or etc, etc? Food for thought...
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