In the pubs and social clubs them size tables, will it improve my snooker?
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Will playing pool (8 ball) improve my snooker?
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It had the opposite effect in my case...
Started playing snooker young, only once a week, gave it up completely in the late teens and then when I tried to go back to snooker having played serious pool 3-4 times a week for ten years or more and I couldn't play at all!!
Pool makes you lazy imo, take your eyes off pots and still make them, play silly amounts of side and still make them, cue badly and still pot em. It's ruined me!---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Old cue collector --
Cue Sales: http://oldcues.co.uk/index.php?id=for_sale_specials
(yes I know they're not cheap, I didn't intend them to be!..)
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Playing pool to improve your snooker? Nah I don't think so! I started playing american 8 ball in the beginning then shifted to snooker, the only in common between the 2 games is that both require you to hold a stick, and both games are played on tables with balls to smash!
As a matter of fact, after shifting to snooker and not playing 8 ball for a very long while, I sometimes go to pool clubs with friends to have fun then quickly leave, especially when we have a 1 hour break in university. Playing snooker will make you sky rocket in pool, potting becomes so easy! I find cuing somewhat awkward since a pool cue differs way much than a snooker cue, but you quickly get the hang of it and start potting some serious balls.
Snooker require pots with serious acute angles which is so difficult, thats why when playing against a pool player they'll be shocked by the pots you take which you consider "normal" while they consider impossible.
I noticed pure pool players have weak potting not in comparison to snooker but even in pool it self, if you watch O'Sullivan vs Wu Chiaching in 9 ball or watch Bogdan Wolkowski you'll notice them missing not so difficult pots but because the cue ball is stuck to the cushion or he's slightly awkward, in contrast watch Jimmy White playing he takes those shots as if there is not single element hindering him.It's not the pace of life that concerns me... It's whether I make a 147 break before it ends!
Quote © to Craftman Cues.
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sorry, my post did sound abit wrong after reading it but i stopped playing snooker as i began playing pool at a much higher level but when i went back to snooker i was playing much better. Better postional play and much more confident when potting so in my case it helped me but i wouldnt say pool is a good way to get good at snooker as obviously it isn't.
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sorry just another thing to throw in the mix....playing snooker doesnt nessicarily (spelling lol) help or make your pool 'sky rocket' as its a very different game with very different shots available (depending on rules) but shots like playing balls in off a ball off a pocket to free a pocket up, or skill shots where you pot two balls at once etc etc
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Originally Posted by King T View PostI find cuing somewhat awkward since a pool cue differs way much than a snooker cue, but you quickly get the hang of it and start potting some serious balls.
Snooker require pots with serious acute angles which is so difficult, thats why when playing against a pool player they'll be shocked by the pots you take which you consider "normal" while they consider impossible.
I noticed pure pool players have weak potting not in comparison to snooker but even in pool it self, if you watch O'Sullivan vs Wu Chiaching in 9 ball or watch Bogdan Wolkowski you'll notice them missing not so difficult pots but because the cue ball is stuck to the cushion or he's slightly awkward, in contrast watch Jimmy White playing he takes those shots as if there is not single element hindering him.
I think your comments focus more on American pool.
I play both uk 8ball and snooker with a snooker cue (in fact i use exactly the same cue specs wise).
In pool i use a heck of a lot of acute angles to get pots, the same can be said for any of the the players in the league i play in. This may however be limited to the league i play in, as most of us are also snooker players.
I would say generally pure pool players are MUCH better potters than snooker players (as nothing but potting enters thier minds), however snooker players are MUCH MUCH better at positional, safety play & pretty much ever other aspect of the game.Andi Mack
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Originally Posted by andi mack View PostIMHO
I think your comments focus more on American pool.
I play both uk 8ball and snooker with a snooker cue (in fact i use exactly the same cue specs wise).
In pool i use a heck of a lot of acute angles to get pots, the same can be said for any of the the players in the league i play in. This may however be limited to the league i play in, as most of us are also snooker players.
I would say generally pure pool players are MUCH better potters than snooker players (as nothing but potting enters thier minds), however snooker players are MUCH MUCH better at positional, safety play & pretty much ever other aspect of the game.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Old cue collector --
Cue Sales: http://oldcues.co.uk/index.php?id=for_sale_specials
(yes I know they're not cheap, I didn't intend them to be!..)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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