The art of break building is correct strength of shot which can only come about through having a consistant cue action that gives the same result from the cue ball all the time.
If you don't strike the cue ball on the delivery stroke where you address it then you won't get the position you require, if you decelerate or drop the shoulder on the delivery stroke then you will cue across the cue ball and miss, if you don't look where you should then you won't get your cue on the line of aim in the first place and a good cue action won't matter.
As a beginner your practise should be to aquire all these things before you start to enter any kind of competition. Practise line ups where you're not allowed to disturb any ball in the line, this will help to improve your cue ball control, especially your soft deep screw shots, it will also force you to take on more difficult angled pots when the straighter option means a definite cannon has to be played.
Practising straight balls all the time will get you nowhere when it comes to match play; straight balls mean all three targets are on the same line, cue ball, object ball and pocket and your cue can come through straight while looking at any of them, on an angled pot however the only target is the object ball, and it's this you must learn to focus on when finding the line of aim and delivering the cue.
Practising straight balls all the time means that in match play you will subconsciously leave yourself the pot you're most secure with, and when it comes to break building, a straight shot means the cue ball can only go forwards or backwards, severely limiting your positional options.
If you don't strike the cue ball on the delivery stroke where you address it then you won't get the position you require, if you decelerate or drop the shoulder on the delivery stroke then you will cue across the cue ball and miss, if you don't look where you should then you won't get your cue on the line of aim in the first place and a good cue action won't matter.
As a beginner your practise should be to aquire all these things before you start to enter any kind of competition. Practise line ups where you're not allowed to disturb any ball in the line, this will help to improve your cue ball control, especially your soft deep screw shots, it will also force you to take on more difficult angled pots when the straighter option means a definite cannon has to be played.
Practising straight balls all the time will get you nowhere when it comes to match play; straight balls mean all three targets are on the same line, cue ball, object ball and pocket and your cue can come through straight while looking at any of them, on an angled pot however the only target is the object ball, and it's this you must learn to focus on when finding the line of aim and delivering the cue.
Practising straight balls all the time means that in match play you will subconsciously leave yourself the pot you're most secure with, and when it comes to break building, a straight shot means the cue ball can only go forwards or backwards, severely limiting your positional options.
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