Originally Posted by Byrom
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What do people think of Roy Chisholm's Snooker Secrets?
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Originally Posted by guernseygooner View PostWell done, whatever works for you. It appears you are putting the time in, in a structured way and sticking to a pre-shot routine that works for you.
the main reason for your improvement I suspect.
1) You didn't focus 100% on the pot...
2) You weren't on the right line of aim to start with...
3) Your cueing wasn't straight as a pencil...
Perfect those and people can become half decent players....IMHO!Follow my snooker Articles/stories on Twitter@chrisgaynor2
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Originally Posted by chrisg View PostUPDATE:
Made a 51 break yesterday using the Approach Line System - that's third week in a row I've been testing it out with breaks so far of 68, 52, and 51. Not bad IMHO.
The beauty of this system is you can make slight tweaks to it in testing. I approach even more outside the ball than Roy does in his video and it seems to work nicely. In fact, I'm finding I'm potting a lot more balls where the white is off the cushion than ever now. Don't even look at bags now. Just 100% focus on OB and for me, it works!
Love this game...
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Originally Posted by markz View PostHas all the solo hard work transferred to playing frames? It's so hard to take your practice game in to a real game, even some professionals struggle.
Had a mate originally who I played with but he doesn't play much now....
RE: Your point about transferring practice to frames etc. Yes it's difficult, but that's where the mental side comes in and I tend to read a lot of sports psychology books such as The Champion's Mind and of course Dr Steve Peters's Chimp Paradox which has been used by the Rocket O'Sullivan...
These books are all great for getting you into the competitive mindset and also can apply for practice as well!...Follow my snooker Articles/stories on Twitter@chrisgaynor2
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Originally Posted by chrisg View PostI think I mentioned on here already - the club where I play barely has any players you can play frames with (of my age anyway). My coach organises frames with other students occasionally when he has more than one student having a lesson at the club, but other than that I don't get the opportunity to play frames with people.
Had a mate originally who I played with but he doesn't play much now....
RE: Your point about transferring practice to frames etc. Yes it's difficult, but that's where the mental side comes in and I tend to read a lot of sports psychology books such as The Champion's Mind and of course Dr Steve Peters's Chimp Paradox which has been used by the Rocket O'Sullivan...
These books are all great for getting you into the competitive mindset and also can apply for practice as well!...
Del Hill'd theory about cummies is good as well, I'm sure it's online somewhere.
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Originally Posted by jonny66 View PostTaking it into a game is all about your pre-shot routine IMO, that and taking it as it comes. You can't really put a number on a great break, Ronnie's best was only 60-odd, that one where the table was a mess and he cleared it like it was nothing.
Del Hill'd theory about cummies is good as well, I'm sure it's online somewhere.
....
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Originally Posted by chrisg View PostI think I mentioned on here already - the club where I play barely has any players you can play frames with (of my age anyway). My coach organises frames with other students occasionally when he has more than one student having a lesson at the club, but other than that I don't get the opportunity to play frames with people.
Had a mate originally who I played with but he doesn't play much now....
RE: Your point about transferring practice to frames etc. Yes it's difficult, but that's where the mental side comes in and I tend to read a lot of sports psychology books such as The Champion's Mind and of course Dr Steve Peters's Chimp Paradox which has been used by the Rocket O'Sullivan...
These books are all great for getting you into the competitive mindset and also can apply for practice as well!...
The Inner Game of Tennis gets good reviews for developing the mental side of the things. I gave up after the first chapter, but that's more me being lazy than anything.
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Originally Posted by chrisg View PostI think I mentioned on here already - the club where I play barely has any players you can play frames with (of my age anyway). My coach organises frames with other students occasionally when he has more than one student having a lesson at the club, but other than that I don't get the opportunity to play frames with people.
Had a mate originally who I played with but he doesn't play much now....
RE: Your point about transferring practice to frames etc. Yes it's difficult, but that's where the mental side comes in and I tend to read a lot of sports psychology books such as The Champion's Mind and of course Dr Steve Peters's Chimp Paradox which has been used by the Rocket O'Sullivan...
These books are all great for getting you into the competitive mindset and also can apply for practice as well!...
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One thing almost every snooker player overlooks, that is very important to break building, is the tightness of the rack. If they are tight any cannons you play into the pack will work out better and you'll have more reds in the open, even pool players tend to overlook this when they play snooker, put them in a basic triangle shape and make sure they don't touch the pink, wrong.
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Originally Posted by jonny66 View PostOne thing almost every snooker player overlooks, that is very important to break building, is the tightness of the rack. If they are tight any cannons you play into the pack will work out better and you'll have more reds in the open, even pool players tend to overlook this when they play snooker, put them in a basic triangle shape and make sure they don't touch the pink, wrong.This is how you play darts ,MVG two nines in the same match!
https://youtu.be/yqTGtwOpHu8
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Originally Posted by itsnoteasy View PostTwo or three safety shots at the start and all that's changed.
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Originally Posted by jonny66 View PostTaking it into a game is all about your pre-shot routine IMO, that and taking it as it comes. You can't really put a number on a great break, Ronnie's best was only 60-odd, that one where the table was a mess and he cleared it like it was nothing.
Del Hill'd theory about cummies is good as well, I'm sure it's online somewhere.
A lot of people are excited to learn things from him?
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