Originally Posted by SouthPaw
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
World Snooker Championships Discussion
Collapse
X
-
-
Originally Posted by P.Smith View PostYes you're right. Looks to me as if it all happened when he came back after the third frame. Started out really good and aggressive and then unfortunately knocked in a red when going into the pack off the blue. Seemed to knock him quite a lot.
Comment
-
Originally Posted by nrage View PostIndeed. Luck evens out, what goes around comes around, players make their own luck. Luck only enters into a game when players are making mistakes, if they're playing well they're in control and luck plays only a very small part. If they're playing badly then a bit of luck can help, or hinder. It's unlikely for any one player to only have good luck, or only have bad luck.
Carter got bad running last night despite playing well and lost, Ronnie got good running and won. It's the way it is, nothing at all to do with making your own luck.
You don't make your own good luck, you take advantage of it, and your bad luck, when playing against somenone, is that particular someones good luck
Luck does not even out, not even over a single lifetime let alone in a certain timescale of a certain career or certain tournament. It has been said that a million chimpanzees given a million typewriters over the course of infinity would eventually come up with the complete works of Shakespeare. Would the same number of chimpanzees playing snooker over the same period be capable of making a 147 ?
Personally I would say bollocks to both scenarios but probability theory says otherwise.
IMO in order to play at your best and make lots of tons and 147's and win lots of tournaments you need the run of the balls in your favour most of the time, and that is not entirely in your hands no matter how good you are. There is always something that is out of your control, especially when you are up against someone else for whom the same applies, as then what goes for you goes against him and vice versa.
Comment
-
Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostYou hear people say quite often that when you are playing well you get a good run of the balls. I would say that you can play well but not get a good run of the balls and struggle as a result and end up losing as proved in the Maguire v Poomjaeng match.
Carter got bad running last night despite playing well and lost, Ronnie got good running and won. It's the way it is, nothing at all to do with making your own luck.
You don't make your own good luck, you take advantage of it, and your bad luck, when playing against somenone, is that particular someones good luck
Luck does not even out, not even over a single lifetime let alone in a certain timescale of a certain career or certain tournament. It has been said that a million chimpanzees given a million typewriters over the course of infinity would eventually come up with the complete works of Shakespeare. Would the same number of chimpanzees playing snooker over the same period be capable of making a 147 ?
Personally I would say bollocks to both scenarios but probability theory says otherwise.
IMO in order to play at your best and make lots of tons and 147's and win lots of tournaments you need the run of the balls in your favour most of the time, and that is not entirely in your hands no matter how good you are. There is always something that is out of your control, especially when you are up against someone else for whom the same applies, as then what goes for you goes against him and vice versa.Highest Match Break 39 (November 10th 2015)
Comment
-
well said vmax4steve. I can tell you play the game and understand it whereas a lot of these people who say luck evens itself out are obviously quite lucky in life themselves that they tend not to notice their bad luck so much because they probably don't have much of it.
The point I've been making all morning regarding Murphy and Trump is that although both played pretty poor, it was Trump who wasn't getting away with his misses as much as Murphy was, and naturally that has a negative impact on your game and shot choice. As Murphy got away time and again with his misses it raised his confidence because he knew he was going to get another chance. Whereas the player who gets no run tends to come to the table all the time with a negative mindset. TBF to trump he never got too down about it, he kept going for his long pots to make something happen but nothing came out positively for him.
That is snooker in a nutshell at this level now, its why Selby won the UK and Masters titles and also why the likes of Trump might not win the titles he should because he's not this lucker that everyone lables him as.
Ronnie is an incredibly lucky player, as was Hendry because they seem to always get a better run of the ball against their opponents who's luck tends to run out against them. Be intresting this afternoon to see if the 'ballrun' himself can get his usual form of luck too or whether that runs out because its O'Sullivan he's playing against. I genuinely do believe that a lot of the most successful sports people and teams are luckier than their counterparts and this helps them maintain a more positive approach because they feel that luck will be on their side.
Comment
-
Personally I would say bollocks to both scenarios but probability theory says otherwise.
I always preferred "there are as many even numbers as there are even and odd nummbers added together"
Back on topic, I don't think Judd is out of the match yet. But he will need to step it up this evening for sure as Murphy is a pretty solid front runner.
Comment
-
Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostYou hear people say quite often that when you are playing well you get a good run of the balls. I would say that you can play well but not get a good run of the balls and struggle as a result ..
Originally Posted by vmax4steve View Post.. and end up losing as proved in the Maguire v Poomjaeng match.
Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostCarter got bad running last night despite playing well and lost, Ronnie got good running and won. It's the way it is, nothing at all to do with making your own luck. You don't make your own good luck, you take advantage of it, and your bad luck, when playing against somenone, is that particular someones good luck
"making your own luck" shouldn't be taken literally, of course you cannot influence luck itself. What it implies instead is that luck is not the defining (most important, most significant) factor in a result, the player, their choices and how they play are.
Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostLuck does not even out, not even over a single lifetime let alone in a certain timescale of a certain career or certain tournament. It has been said that a million chimpanzees given a million typewriters over the course of infinity would eventually come up with the complete works of Shakespeare. Would the same number of chimpanzees playing snooker over the same period be capable of making a 147 ?
Personally I would say bollocks to both scenarios but probability theory says otherwise.
Over a match it's even more likely to even out and over a career it's just about a certainty IMO.
Compared to monkeys and typewriters, it's a whole order of magnitude different in probability. The chance of a monkey typing the first letter of Hamlet is 1 in 26 (minimum) and the chance they then go on to type the 2nd letter is 1 in 26 x 1 in 26 and so on, thousands of times. This is a vanishingly small probability, which requires infinite time to happen with any certainty.
Originally Posted by vmax4steve View PostIMO in order to play at your best and make lots of tons and 147's and win lots of tournaments you need the run of the balls in your favour most of the time, and that is not entirely in your hands no matter how good you are. There is always something that is out of your control, especially when you are up against someone else for whom the same applies, as then what goes for you goes against him and vice versa.
Overall I think a player can overcome most of the bad luck that comes their way, there is only the rare piece of bad luck which is unrecoverable and this has to repeatedly happen at critical points in order to lose them a whole match."Do unto others 20% better than you would expect them to do unto you, to correct for subjective error"
- Linus Pauling
Comment
-
yep, two nice breaks . . .My favourite players: Walter Lindrum (AUS), Neil Robertson (AUS), Eddie Charlton (AUS), Robby Foldvari (AUS), Vinnie Calabrese (AUS), Jimmy White, Stephen Hendry, Alex Higgins, Ronnie O'Sullivan, Dominic Dale and Barry Hawkins.
I dream of a 147 (but would be happy with a 100)
Comment
Comment