Hello everyone !
I'm new around here.
My name is Aloïs and I'm a french 22 years old computer science engineering student and future snooker world champion.
I really enjoy watching snooker and I spend way too much time looking at snooker videos on youtube.
I watched some as a child on TV and completely forgot about it afterwards and ended up rediscovering it recently completely randomly.
I would really love to play snooker myself, I would probably be terrible at it, but with time and effort I hope to end up being ok and even why not (dreaming is not forbidden) entering Q School in a couple of years for fun and maybe somehow get to play snooker for a living. (Yeah, that escalated quickly )
Well at least I would like to be able to start and begin to play a bit. The problem is that I live in France. There are very few billiards club around where I live, and not any of them have a snooker table. The closest club that has a proper snooker table is 60 km away. Closest clubs have 3-cuschion billiards tables with no pockets.
I do not think I can fit a proper full size snooker table at home and It is way too expensive anyway for now.
I can afford for couple of hundreds of £ of materials.
So here is my question : would you advise to go and play other cue games more accessible where I live and maybe get to snooker later or do you think I can play snooker on a smaller table ? A smaller table would probably still be challenging to play for me but in the end, is it a proper training for actual full size snooker ? If the average pot distance has to be on average multiply by 2, the change must be quite a chock.
There are 6 ft light folding tables for 300£ online it looks quite cheap and I'm afraid it would only be a quite expensive children's toy.
There are 7 ft actual heavy tables for 500£ that looks legit to play American billiards would you recommend starting playing pool / snooker on this ?
The last option would be to save my money to play in clubs with maybe better quality but it's less practical and limits the time to play.
In six months my studies are over so I could probably save then to buy better gear or even try to find a job in the UK to get easier access to snooker.
So yeah, the final question is what would you do if you were in my situation ?
Thanks for you help and have a nice holiday everyone
I'm new around here.
My name is Aloïs and I'm a french 22 years old computer science engineering student and future snooker world champion.
I really enjoy watching snooker and I spend way too much time looking at snooker videos on youtube.
I watched some as a child on TV and completely forgot about it afterwards and ended up rediscovering it recently completely randomly.
I would really love to play snooker myself, I would probably be terrible at it, but with time and effort I hope to end up being ok and even why not (dreaming is not forbidden) entering Q School in a couple of years for fun and maybe somehow get to play snooker for a living. (Yeah, that escalated quickly )
Well at least I would like to be able to start and begin to play a bit. The problem is that I live in France. There are very few billiards club around where I live, and not any of them have a snooker table. The closest club that has a proper snooker table is 60 km away. Closest clubs have 3-cuschion billiards tables with no pockets.
I do not think I can fit a proper full size snooker table at home and It is way too expensive anyway for now.
I can afford for couple of hundreds of £ of materials.
So here is my question : would you advise to go and play other cue games more accessible where I live and maybe get to snooker later or do you think I can play snooker on a smaller table ? A smaller table would probably still be challenging to play for me but in the end, is it a proper training for actual full size snooker ? If the average pot distance has to be on average multiply by 2, the change must be quite a chock.
There are 6 ft light folding tables for 300£ online it looks quite cheap and I'm afraid it would only be a quite expensive children's toy.
There are 7 ft actual heavy tables for 500£ that looks legit to play American billiards would you recommend starting playing pool / snooker on this ?
The last option would be to save my money to play in clubs with maybe better quality but it's less practical and limits the time to play.
In six months my studies are over so I could probably save then to buy better gear or even try to find a job in the UK to get easier access to snooker.
So yeah, the final question is what would you do if you were in my situation ?
Thanks for you help and have a nice holiday everyone
Comment