Originally Posted by bolton-cueman
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Long Straight Blue Challenge
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Originally Posted by OmaMiesta View PostI disagree, getting the straight shot down is the basic fundemental necessary for all angles as with any pot you must cue perfectly straight to contact the desired point required to make the pot. In theory, aiming at any specific point on an object ball to make a pot is a straight shot. The whole idea of this excersize is to ensure that youre always cueing center cue ball with no unintentional spin that can potentially throw you offline. That being said I agree in practicality its always good to practice every angle in a similar repitition routine. Break down all the angles in variations of ( quarter, half, 3/4, and full )
Anyway at least thats what works for me I find.
My challenge: close you eyes before you deliver and pot the ball. Requires true confidence in your action. If you have dead straight cueing, you don't need eyes to pot that blue.
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Originally Posted by 3000up View PostStraight cueing is the ultimate and will allow you to pot that long blue into half a pocket off the bumper with another ball obscuring the other half. When you are this good, you know you have it.
My challenge: close you eyes before you deliver and pot the ball. Requires true confidence in your action. If you have dead straight cueing, you don't need eyes to pot that blue.
still waiting for the 24ft screwback back video you never did xx#jeSuisMasterBlasterBarryWhite2v1977Luclex(andHisF ictiousTwin)BigSplash!
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Originally Posted by OmaMiesta View PostHaha you guys are talking about some next level stuff! Ill give it a crack tonight but I sense some impending failure on its way ;pLast edited by 3000up; 8 August 2015, 07:59 PM.
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Originally Posted by OmaMiesta View PostI disagree, getting the straight shot down is the basic fundemental necessary for all angles as with any pot you must cue perfectly straight to contact the desired point required to make the pot. In theory, aiming at any specific point on an object ball to make a pot is a straight shot.
As I said in my post once you know you have a straight cue action then the long straight practise shot isn't doing you any favours when it comes to match time. Train your eyes as well as your hand, practise keeping that focus on the object ball.
I still practise the long ball off the blue spot but with the cue ball on the yellow or green spot with varying degrees of spin to control the cue ball for black or pink position. A far better shot for match practise than trying to be like Judd Trump. In fact anywhere along the baulk line in between the dead straight positions; just a tad off straight is the hardest one of all as it's so very easy to look to the pocket.
If you're not being watched by a coach or a friend you need to rely on the outcome to deduce what went wrong; providing that you set the shot up correctly in the first place, hit the pot too thick and you can be almost certain that your eyes flicked to the pocket, too thin and you can be almost certain that your shoulder dropped too early or you decelerated and you cued across the cue ball.
Don't play practise routines where you can't work out that you're taking your eye off the object ball, a video won't show it and it can look like everything was played correctly yet still the pot missed by a foot and you're left in the dark as to why.
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Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostI once hit twelve in a row, screwing back into the green pocket on six of them and thought I'd cracked it. Played a frame afterwards and I was terrible.
Too many play this exercise and think they're playing well, but snooker is all about angles, recognising them and keeping your eye on the object ball when playing them. I no longer practise straight shots as you can take your eye off the object ball to the pocket and still cue straight, which is fatal on an angled pot as your hand will follow your eye.
I'm not saying don't, but once you know you have a good straight cue action always give yourself an angle on potting exercises, even a slight one; train your eyes as well as your hands.
Totally agree I've said it before, waste of time exercise. Potting long blues all day is completely different snooker altogether.
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Originally Posted by Leo View PostTotally agree I've said it before, waste of time exercise. Potting long blues all day is completely different snooker altogether.#jeSuisMasterBlasterBarryWhite2v1977Luclex(andHisF ictiousTwin)BigSplash!
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Nice shooting Oma. If that is your normal average, than this is truly amazing for a club player.
Watch this. John Higgins practises. At around 4 minute mark he starts with long blue routine. It is just sickening how straight he cues. And yet even he misses a few.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuL87TeAwas
I think I got around 40 pots or so out of 100 attempts once. With only 10 attempts, I could get better than average result due to sheer luck, or I might miss all of them
My record is 12 pots in a row. Also 14 misses in a row. Would not want this shot to be frame ball winner. Average could get down to 10% or less in a match with people watching.
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Originally Posted by ace man View PostNice shooting Oma. If that is your normal average, than this is truly amazing for a club player.
Watch this. John Higgins practises. At around 4 minute mark he starts with long blue routine. It is just sickening how straight he cues. And yet even he misses a few.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuL87TeAwas
I think I got around 40 pots or so out of 100 attempts once. With only 10 attempts, I could get better than average result due to sheer luck, or I might miss all of them
My record is 12 pots in a row. Also 14 misses in a row. Would not want this shot to be frame ball winner. Average could get down to 10% or less in a match with people watching.
One of the things I've noticed when I've watched videos of pros practice is that when they miss an easy ball, like higgins at about 1:10 in the video he doesnt moan / complain / pull his face.
I'm sure most amateurs, even good standard regular players would moan and groan. Perhaps we could learn something from that little facet of the game?#jeSuisMasterBlasterBarryWhite2v1977Luclex(andHisF ictiousTwin)BigSplash!
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Although I do 3 or so long blues a day I think the really true test of straight delivery is where you make both blue and cueball in the top pocket. Steve Davis once said if you can do this 10 times in a row then your cue action would be better than his (meaning I guess he was having trouble with 10 in a row).
When I do the long blue screwing back to the baulkline or better I use the spotted cueball and I notice when I shoot hard I get a very slight rotation from some unintentional left side. Very upsetting as I get that on most of the ones where I use a lot of power.
I also practice a long red into a top pocket with cueball a couple of inches from the baulk cushion to end up on the black. This is a situation that comes up frequently in a frame and especially at the start of one and it's a very good shot to practice.Last edited by Terry Davidson; 9 August 2015, 11:49 AM.Terry Davidson
IBSF Master Coach & Examiner
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