If someone has pointed this out earlier then I apologize, I didn't want to read all the replies. The reason the ball is going in even though he is using the "wrong" english is not due to english, it is due to the deflection of the cue ball when he cues it off center. When he is cutting a ball to the left he aligns for a thin cut. When he applies left english the cue hits to the left of center of the cue ball which forces it to deflect to the right. So his thin cut becomes even thinner. The stiffer the cue the more deflection you get. It's why they make low deflection cues, so it's easier to aim when using english.
Good info Dupree. A suggestion for your videos: show an angle of the camera set up behind you so viewers can see how you are lining up and cueing. The whole right/left thing gets a bit confusion when viewers are observing with the cue ball coming toward them.
It can get confusing but practicing it will help u understand.i jus try to remember right English throws to the left and vice versa after a while it's easier to understand
He tells you left or right spin (English). It’s up to you to practice and see how much left or right to use. It’ll be different for all different angles.
Sensational Stuff! In the immortal words of Fats Brown, "It takes more than skill to be a champion. It takes equal parts of talent, luck, work, and nerve..."
great lessons. extreme cut shot had always be my most difficult situation in the game and it comes alot. cant wait to apply ur teaching to my game. thanks.. keep up ur great work and waiting for ur next tutotial videos
Thanks Dupree, good info. The reason for the direction of the spin in your shots is that the spin the object ball takes is always the opposite direction of the spin you give to the cue ball.
Them pockets look like a girl I knew in high school! Keep up the great work, you have a great shot, I hope you have not lost your passion for the game! This video is 5 years old now!
Great tips. I much prefer cutting. Not good at banking. Knowing I can cut these impossible looking cuts will come in real handy! Thanks, you got a new subscriber here!
I have, since finding your channel, taken to watching your videos while I eat lunch and then go home and apply the techniques. Thanks for improving my game. I usually just try to cut the object ball very thin to make the shot. Aiming to miss sounds dangerous, but I will definitely give it a try.
This is a perfect video for beginners like me. I understand exactly what he's saying even though it might be a bit of from the exact pool terms. Thanx m8 for taking the time and effort to make useful videos 😃
I noticed that too. I think its good to have your home table with narrow pockets so when you go to the bar they look huge and makes you look better. I'm glad my cheap home table has narrow ones and the bar I go too big ones. However, not as big as that table.
Good choice on the intro. I heard the bass in these Sony's & thought that your editing is done well. Thanks for the video friend. A very good lesson for beginners also by the way!!! 👍🏻
Beautiful shots and explanations! As a beginner, it would be great to see exactly where you are hitting the cue ball, either using a graphic or a camera close up of where the cue contacts the cue ball.
Dude, your videos are great. Good explaination and good examples that can be applied in various other situations. I read some of the comments down here and let me tell you this: the way in which you do your videos is what got you the subscribers and loyal followers, DO NOT change the way you do things to appease one or two douchebags. Good stuff man.
No man he should buy a gopro and when showing spins or where to hit the cue ball he should switch to a gopro and then go back to this one,he just has to cut video like 3 times and put one from gopro... simple to edit and would help a lot and also be a better video
ty for all ur tips i did some of these shots with spin i never knew that u have to use a bit of side lol the only shot i can get 1 out of ten is the extreme cuts u played the first 2 shots can be a bit award for me to play but ur cut down the table is norm for me ty a lot for ur detail explanation i will try the extreme cut with side once again
You have to spin the cue ball just enough so that its rotational speed matches its forward speed, which effectively cancels its rotation. Upon contact, no spin is transferred to the object ball.
What you're actually talking about on those "aim to miss"shots, is "throw".It's not spin that makes the cue ball hit short of the pocket,but throw.The cue ball actually drags the object ball off line.Throw is an important concept to understand,because you can use it to make otherwise impossible shots. Inside english will increase throw,while outside english will diminish throw.
Thank you. Hubby is trying to teach me and I end up frustrated and confused. I am not trying to become a pro. I just want to make the game fun for us both. This video really explained something I had been wondering about. I wonder if you could make one with a go pro so we could see the shots from the shooters perspective. Just a thought. I tend to lose my target when I walk around the ball.
I still can't believe he pulled off that over 90 degree cut shot the length of the table. I used to be very good at that type of cut when I played but that shot was phenomenal.
Nice video! Regarding the spins you are having trouble explaining, you can refer to them as inside and outside English. On a cut shot where you cut an object ball left, inside English is left spin, outside is right spin. If you cut an object ball to the right, inside is right and outside is left. Keep up the good work
Opposite if your left handed? Being left handed "cutting" seems natural for me but I never knew I had to spin it, I must do it subconsciously. I just play pool for fun, never got into the terminology but my friends think I'm crazy when I make these shots. Is it easier for left handed?
I also hear the cue ball lifting off the surface after hitting the rails so they are just a little low. Keep up the good work on your videos good info.
I could have used this video before I played last night. I learned a lot; now I have to apply it. It would be helpful for many if you could find a way to show the view from the stick's point of vies. To see where you strike the ball and watch the cue do its work. That would be cool.
Its not the "spin" that sends it into the rail, but rather the 'cut induced throw,' imparted by the friction of the cue ball contact throwing the object ball slightly in the direction that the cue ball is moving. Putting outside spin on the cue ball eliminates that friction.
ction there is an equal and opposite reactipn.it is not friction.the object ball HAS to move away from the direction of the cue ball ,so you allow for that in the cut OR use english.
I don't think you know what you are talking about. In a frictionless world, the trajectory of the object ball will always be 90 degrees to that of the cue ball. That's basic physics. What is also basic physics is the friction between the object ball and cue ball. The cue ball literally drags the object ball in the same direction as the cue ball causing the trajectory angle to be less than 90 degrees. This can be offset by using outside English (not inside) allowing the cue ball to roll off the object ball like a gear. There are some great videos out there on contact induced throw and spin induced throw. I recommend that you watch them.
You dont exactly know what you are talking about either shaun but you have everything else right but i got no clue as to what you are talking about with the friction-less world stuff. My world has friction, so i dont care about theoretical conclusions. Inside english will also alleviate friction induced grab or cling, which ever one prefers to call it. So will draw and top spin if there is skid involved. The draw is a given for skid effect rather quickly despite velocity, but in the case of top spin, its harder to produce the skid as quickly because velocity sends the mass forward before the skid takes place. ....... and because it is difficult to produce a needed level stroke and all these variable physics combinations as well as the cueball bouncing more often with high english rather than draw, top of the rail in the way of the stroke hand for a level stroke in many situations, distance between cue ball and object ball etc etc etc, high english is the least effective out of what i call "lubricant". Spin or vertical axis side spin with no skid is the best lubricant. Spin induced throw is most effective when combined with skid. The skid is most of the cause for effective throw. Thats why pure vertical draw will definitely help thin cuts tremendously.
paul couto cling or skid only has to do with a dirty cue ball and extreme diversion from the expected path. This is throw, of which there are two types, contact induced and spin induced. There are some great videos out there showing there effects and explaining how to compensate for it, along with demonstrations. You should take a few minutes to watch them.
1st shot: IIRC from Byrne, the cue ball does not spin the object ball into the rail, it pushes it into the rail. English on the cue counteracts the push.
Wow..I never thought that cue ball’s english can affect the target ball’s spin, all the while I thought it’s only for directing your cue ball’s next position. Thanks for sharing, even pros during tournaments miss this kind of shots. I don’t understand the aim to miss part, due to its very subjective tone but I appreciate your demo and it works.
When you shoot the 8 ball you did aim the left of the cue ball, is it the same if you hit the right of the cue aiming to the left of the 8 ball will still get it to the right corner pocket, yes or no?
This is great info, we would need to practice it and figure out how it works on different tables to get the percentage up, but yes it is an option to playing safe or if we can still play safe while doing this maybe if our percentage at doing it is not yet high enough.. We would not want to leave our opponent straight in :-)
Funny how you showed the long rail shot in this video as I had been practicing that today with CTE and 90/90 aiming and missing every time. Now I can do this with the "aim to miss" approach and will need to figure out which angles call for this -- in other words, when does CTE and 90/90 stop working on these long steep cut shots? Angle is no problem when close to the pocket, like a couple or few feet, but when the distance is more than half the table those methods need to be tweaked with aim to miss. Hmmm, maybe edge of ferrule aiming?
Love how he says "and here it is" and then skips all the times that he missed. Would love to see him explain a shot for 15 minutes and then make the ball with no cutaways
You should do some videos on how to avoid that double kiss, where possible. Something I only see pretty advanced players doing correctly, using draw/follow and English properly for each case, where it leads or trails the cue ball on the kiss. A very good thing to know. If you don't know how, there is a vid on Dr. Daves site about it. There are also a couple of INTENTIONAL double kiss shots a (used to be) SUPERB snooker player showed me where it looks like you have the side pocket shot with a double kiss certainty, so you hit it JUST SO to get the double and send it to the corner pocket. He also showed me a shot where he placed the object in the far corner diagonal cross table from the corner he was shooting the cue, and placed another ball about six inches frozen on the short rail near the cue pocket, then shot in the corner shot and drew the ball, no cushions all the way back to make the frozen high angle (pretty near zero error budget) cut shot on that remaining ball. Took him three tries, first hit the ball, didn't make it, second off the ball/wrong side by millimeters, third cut the ball right in the pocket. My response (Do you think that makes me like you more or less"? He laughed, AMAZING rock control that guy has. He came one missed final shot from winning the Australian Open snooker many years back, like I said, was REALLY good. Evidently a camera man moved just as he took the shot. I would have been livid, but he's pretty easy going. Keep up the fun! ;-) Your final shot brought it to mind (X about 100). I run that exercise every now and again to check my center ball hitting and accurate aiming, it's a good one.
I must use spin alot more than I thought bc I usually aim to the heart of the pocket on must shots...well then actually on thinner more extreme shots I do shoot to miss thin now I think about it
Thanks man. Great job. But it will be better for viewers if you show point of contact between stick and cue ball. Also we need to know how you are aiming around the target ball. Thanks
On the yellow ball shot at approx 3 mins he uses totally the wrong spin (left). I think the only reason he pots the ball is that the cueball is 'thrown' to the right, thus making it an extremely fine cut. If he's making it with left spin then you could play this with no side at all (far safer) and still make the ball.
This is true. I recommend outside English on back cuts, as the spin will throw the object ball to the thin side. Inside spin is usually reserved for frozen rail shots.
Ya know on planes they say check now where your nearest exit is in case of an emergency and it may be behind you. Well, check to see if the pool pro is a great explainer who'll save your game in an emergency and he may be behind (or younger) than you. Point. Case. Win. Also, disregard any negative comments proffered by less than great pool players here in your comments section who'll find anything from (pocket size, video pauses, extra verbiage - i like that) to diss you. HEY PEOPLE, if you don't want to hear him, mute your machine. D'oH! i actually put on the annotations as I have a lot of background noise here in Manhattan, NY so I enjoy your explanations. For example "I like the long cut because it's a beautiful shot; beautiful - yeah when its executed beautifully which happens to me 2 times out of ten but there's always room for improvement and isn't that the point here? Keep those videos coming, this one totally helped my game by remembering to "aim for the miss" and a simple yet fantastic explanation for using spin and backspin. Jeez where were you 7 years ago when I was, and am still, struggling with those cut shots. Banks are my strength, but ya need to be good all-around or in your case great all -around.
Well said, Phil...the kid is doing a good job in terms novice players can understand. Why in the world, if all you can do is make negative BS comments, would someone spend the time to watch? The hot shot criticism freaks should be out hustling for big dough. I doubt any of them could take you in a heads-up match.
You are a great shot. For teaching purposes beginners may be putting opposite spin than that of which you are describing, mixing up right spin and right English. Clarify where you hit your cue ball.
It is not so much the spin of the object ball that is causing it to go into the rail. More so, it is caused by the direction of the cueball's force. When the cueball touches the object ball, the direction of that touching-force is toward the rail. Some of that touching-force's direction does indeed causes the object ball to spin, but the predominant reason of it's railward diversion (off the line of centers) is the direction of the frictional force during impact.
The only thing better than understanding how the cue ball “spin” can “throw” the object ball is having “young eyes.” Make these shots now because they will get much, much harder the older you get. Good video instruction - thanks for posting.
You're a good teacher! I aimed to miss and I missed!
lol
E Dinger
Lol
lol
He is telling you to hit rail then ball.
If someone has pointed this out earlier then I apologize, I didn't want to read all the replies. The reason the ball is going in even though he is using the "wrong" english is not due to english, it is due to the deflection of the cue ball when he cues it off center. When he is cutting a ball to the left he aligns for a thin cut. When he applies left english the cue hits to the left of center of the cue ball which forces it to deflect to the right. So his thin cut becomes even thinner. The stiffer the cue the more deflection you get. It's why they make low deflection cues, so it's easier to aim when using english.
Correct, Sam!
I can confirm this glitch has been patched!
Good info Dupree. A suggestion for your videos: show an angle of the camera set up behind you so viewers can see how you are lining up and cueing. The whole right/left thing gets a bit confusion when viewers are observing with the cue ball coming toward them.
I was going to say the same thing. I need to know where on the cue did he hit.. High low mid, left right center.. LMAO soooooo much
It can get confusing but practicing it will help u understand.i jus try to remember right English throws to the left and vice versa after a while it's easier to understand
I agree also not sure what way English he is using
Good question, i don't think he has a camera
He tells you left or right spin (English). It’s up to you to practice and see how much left or right to use. It’ll be different for all different angles.
Sensational Stuff! In the immortal words of Fats Brown, "It takes more than skill to be a champion. It takes equal parts of talent, luck, work, and nerve..."
great lessons. extreme cut shot had always be my most difficult situation in the game and it comes alot. cant wait to apply ur teaching to my game. thanks.. keep up ur great work and waiting for ur next tutotial videos
We appreciate you too Dupree a young master of the art.thanks
This guy loves the game/sport. Great teacher!
This video was nothing less than mind-blowing! Can't wait to give them a try!
"Here's the cut from a couple different angles"
*one angle*
Noticed that too. But a great video none the less. Wish I was raised with a pool table like that in my house.
Camera angles.
That room bigger than my house.
Those back cuts were insane!!!
Thanks Dupree, good info. The reason for the direction of the spin in your shots is that the spin the object ball takes is always the opposite direction of the spin you give to the cue ball.
Good call.
Thank you for your videos.
I’m going to practice my aim to miss and back cuts.
Them pockets look like a girl I knew in high school! Keep up the great work, you have a great shot, I hope you have not lost your passion for the game! This video is 5 years old now!
Great tips. I much prefer cutting. Not good at banking. Knowing I can cut these impossible looking cuts will come in real handy!
Thanks, you got a new subscriber here!
And now you tought me something!! Thanks!
Solid video. High on information, examples -- low on BS and wasted time. Subscribed.
when I aim to make it I miss when I aim to miss I still miss I've learned it was just meant to be I am a misser and I am proud of it
Really good video! Thank you for making it.
I have, since finding your channel, taken to watching your videos while I eat lunch and then go home and apply the techniques. Thanks for improving my game. I usually just try to cut the object ball very thin to make the shot. Aiming to miss sounds dangerous, but I will definitely give it a try.
While the cue may impart some spin it is not the reason it goes into the rail. The momentum is actually pushing/sliding the ball forward off line.
thanks for this tutorial, i learned something new. Ur really great.
This is a perfect video for beginners like me. I understand exactly what he's saying even though it might be a bit of from the exact pool terms. Thanx m8 for taking the time and effort to make useful videos 😃
It takes practice but it works. I made the long cut where you aim to miss on my third try. I was shocked. Good video Dupree.
Your best video, I learned from you. People are amazed when I make cuts shots. I hardly need banks , because I can cut almost everything.
great shot,very nice,thank you!!
very great lesson continue the great job
Great technics and explained very basically.
Great lesson!
Awesome, awesome tutorials! Keep uploading and posting new content! It helps me alot!
Wat kind of stick is that a meucci?
Those are the widest side pockets I’ve ever seen in my entire life!
I noticed that too. I think its good to have your home table with narrow pockets so when you go to the bar they look huge and makes you look better. I'm glad my cheap home table has narrow ones and the bar I go too big ones. However, not as big as that table.
The side pockets are 1/2” wider than the corner pockets
Good choice on the intro. I heard the bass in these Sony's & thought that your editing is done well. Thanks for the video friend. A very good lesson for beginners also by the way!!! 👍🏻
Sounds great in Bose QuietComfort as well!
Beautiful shots and explanations! As a beginner, it would be great to see exactly where you are hitting the cue ball, either using a graphic or a camera close up of where the cue contacts the cue ball.
Dude, your videos are great. Good explaination and good examples that can be applied in various other situations. I read some of the comments down here and let me tell you this: the way in which you do your videos is what got you the subscribers and loyal followers, DO NOT change the way you do things to appease one or two douchebags. Good stuff man.
No man he should buy a gopro and when showing spins or where to hit the cue ball he should switch to a gopro and then go back to this one,he just has to cut video like 3 times and put one from gopro... simple to edit and would help a lot and also be a better video
@@cvjetkoudovicic7451 Or a simple graphic overlay of a cue ball and a crosshair
Great video. Tks
Thx for the great video and info.
ty for all ur tips i did some of these shots with spin i never knew that u have to use a bit of side lol the only shot i can get 1 out of ten is the extreme cuts u played the first 2 shots can be a bit award for me to play but ur cut down the table is norm for me ty a lot for ur detail explanation i will try the extreme cut with side once again
You’re a wizard Harry!!!
Thank you for the tips
You have to spin the cue ball just enough so that its rotational speed matches its forward speed, which effectively cancels its rotation. Upon contact, no spin is transferred to the object ball.
What you're actually talking about on those "aim to miss"shots, is "throw".It's not spin that makes the cue ball hit short of the pocket,but throw.The cue ball actually drags the object ball off line.Throw is an important concept to understand,because you can use it to make otherwise impossible shots. Inside english will increase throw,while outside english will diminish throw.
I should really proofread before I post.Of course,I meant "object ball" in that second sentence.
Only when your balls are dirty....lol. No... I really mean that.
Thank you. Hubby is trying to teach me and I end up frustrated and confused. I am not trying to become a pro. I just want to make the game fun for us both. This video really explained something I had been wondering about. I wonder if you could make one with a go pro so we could see the shots from the shooters perspective. Just a thought. I tend to lose my target when I walk around the ball.
Nice. Very informative
Great stuff. Thanks!
I still can't believe he pulled off that over 90 degree cut shot the length of the table. I used to be very good at that type of cut when I played but that shot was phenomenal.
Awesome videos! For not so extreme cut shots, are you aiming at the center, top, or bottom of the cue ball?
Que bien video Saludos de PERÚ! !!
Nice video! Regarding the spins you are having trouble explaining, you can refer to them as inside and outside English. On a cut shot where you cut an object ball left, inside English is left spin, outside is right spin. If you cut an object ball to the right, inside is right and outside is left. Keep up the good work
+Pool Student I should've thought of that. I'll make sure to do that next time
Opposite if you are left handed.
Opposite if your left handed? Being left handed "cutting" seems natural for me but I never knew I had to spin it, I must do it subconsciously. I just play pool for fun, never got into the terminology but my friends think I'm crazy when I make these shots. Is it easier for left handed?
@@MrSacman88 Not sure about that.
@@MrSacman88 kidding, right?
Great Video!!! TYVM!!!
This is amazing
I also hear the cue ball lifting off the surface after hitting the rails so they are just a little low.
Keep up the good work on your videos good info.
I could have used this video before I played last night. I learned a lot; now I have to apply it.
It would be helpful for many if you could find a way to show the view from the stick's point of vies. To see where you strike the ball and watch the cue do its work. That would be cool.
Thanks this really help me
Its not the "spin" that sends it into the rail, but rather the 'cut induced throw,' imparted by the friction of the cue ball contact throwing the object ball slightly in the direction that the cue ball is moving. Putting outside spin on the cue ball eliminates that friction.
ction there is an equal and opposite reactipn.it is not friction.the object ball HAS to move away from the direction of the cue ball ,so you allow for that in the cut OR use english.
I don't think you know what you are talking about. In a frictionless world, the trajectory of the object ball will always be 90 degrees to that of the cue ball. That's basic physics. What is also basic physics is the friction between the object ball and cue ball. The cue ball literally drags the object ball in the same direction as the cue ball causing the trajectory angle to be less than 90 degrees. This can be offset by using outside English (not inside) allowing the cue ball to roll off the object ball like a gear. There are some great videos out there on contact induced throw and spin induced throw. I recommend that you watch them.
You dont exactly know what you are talking about either shaun but you have everything else right but i got no clue as to what you are talking about with the friction-less world stuff. My world has friction, so i dont care about theoretical conclusions.
Inside english will also alleviate friction induced grab or cling, which ever one prefers to call it. So will draw and top spin if there is skid involved. The draw is a given for skid effect rather quickly despite velocity, but in the case of top spin, its harder to produce the skid as quickly because velocity sends the mass forward before the skid takes place.
....... and because it is difficult to produce a needed level stroke and all these variable physics combinations as well as the cueball bouncing more often with high english rather than draw, top of the rail in the way of the stroke hand for a level stroke in many situations, distance between cue ball and object ball etc etc etc, high english is the least effective out of what i call "lubricant".
Spin or vertical axis side spin with no skid is the best lubricant. Spin induced throw is most effective when combined with skid. The skid is most of the cause for effective throw. Thats why pure vertical draw will definitely help thin cuts tremendously.
paul couto cling or skid only has to do with a dirty cue ball and extreme diversion from the expected path. This is throw, of which there are two types, contact induced and spin induced. There are some great videos out there showing there effects and explaining how to compensate for it, along with demonstrations. You should take a few minutes to watch them.
exactly... cuz spin doesnt change the trajectory of a ball moving forward much at all...
Vc tem que ver os vídeos do Baianinho de Mauá from Brazil.👍
Thanks for the video
I would hate to come across this guy in the pub you’re a god bro keep up the grind
Good job sir
What does power mean?
Is it about long back swing or throwing it forward forcefully?
1st shot: IIRC from Byrne, the cue ball does not spin the object ball into the rail, it pushes it into the rail. English on the cue counteracts the push.
Wow..I never thought that cue ball’s english can affect the target ball’s spin, all the while I thought it’s only for directing your cue ball’s next position. Thanks for sharing, even pros during tournaments miss this kind of shots. I don’t understand the aim to miss part, due to its very subjective tone but I appreciate your demo and it works.
What he is saying is you got to offset your aim for the spin your putting on the object ball... To be fair it's being pro level picky
@@brucecharlie8613 Thanks! wow 4yr ago, tnx for reminding me to try playing again 😂
Good video. I need for you to show me where to place the stick on the cue ball. I mean not just left or right but from top to bottom as well.
great job!
Gotta say that's a hell of a cut.
When you shoot the 8 ball you did aim the left of the cue ball, is it the same if you hit the right of the cue aiming to the left of the 8 ball will still get it to the right corner pocket, yes or no?
This is great info, we would need to practice it and figure out how it works on different tables to get the percentage up, but yes it is an option to playing safe or if we can still play safe while doing this maybe if our percentage at doing it is not yet high enough.. We would not want to leave our opponent straight in :-)
You make it look so easy! You da man😎
Dont mean anything bad by it just very curious how old he is.hes teaches beyond his years
Great video. What size tip are you using?
Funny how you showed the long rail shot in this video as I had been practicing that today with CTE and 90/90 aiming and missing every time. Now I can do this with the "aim to miss" approach and will need to figure out which angles call for this -- in other words, when does CTE and 90/90 stop working on these long steep cut shots? Angle is no problem when close to the pocket, like a couple or few feet, but when the distance is more than half the table those methods need to be tweaked with aim to miss. Hmmm, maybe edge of ferrule aiming?
@ Dupree Trickshots love your content, wanted to ask are you going pro?
Love how he says "and here it is" and then skips all the times that he missed. Would love to see him explain a shot for 15 minutes and then make the ball with no cutaways
Oh my God! This is superb, I can't wait to execute these kinds of shots
Great info thank u
For the first example when you "aimed to miss " we're did you hit the cue ball?
Your are amazing, I love watching you!
'
Good video!
Great work keep it up but at some time i do not see the angle on the cue ball when you apply the stroke thank you.
You should do some videos on how to avoid that double kiss, where possible. Something I only see pretty advanced players doing correctly, using draw/follow and English properly for each case, where it leads or trails the cue ball on the kiss. A very good thing to know. If you don't know how, there is a vid on Dr. Daves site about it. There are also a couple of INTENTIONAL double kiss shots a (used to be) SUPERB snooker player showed me where it looks like you have the side pocket shot with a double kiss certainty, so you hit it JUST SO to get the double and send it to the corner pocket.
He also showed me a shot where he placed the object in the far corner diagonal cross table from the corner he was shooting the cue, and placed another ball about six inches frozen on the short rail near the cue pocket, then shot in the corner shot and drew the ball, no cushions all the way back to make the frozen high angle (pretty near zero error budget) cut shot on that remaining ball. Took him three tries, first hit the ball, didn't make it, second off the ball/wrong side by millimeters, third cut the ball right in the pocket. My response (Do you think that makes me like you more or less"? He laughed, AMAZING rock control that guy has. He came one missed final shot from winning the Australian Open snooker many years back, like I said, was REALLY good. Evidently a camera man moved just as he took the shot. I would have been livid, but he's pretty easy going. Keep up the fun! ;-) Your final shot brought it to mind (X about 100). I run that exercise every now and again to check my center ball hitting and accurate aiming, it's a good one.
I must use spin alot more than I thought bc I usually aim to the heart of the pocket on must shots...well then actually on thinner more extreme shots I do shoot to miss thin now I think about it
Good job. Some photo shots close and behind you when you shoot would be nice. Thumbs up.
love the Sixers jersey jack. .... Dr was the best of them all yea im old school still loved watchin him on Sunday afternoon n his many "housecalls"
Thanks man. Great job.
But it will be better for viewers if you show point of contact between stick and cue ball. Also we need to know how you are aiming around the target ball.
Thanks
Do you use any spins on these shots where you "aim to miss"?
Thank You :)
Um do most of these shots take how many tries? . Or are they edited in your videos good information though.
On the yellow ball shot at approx 3 mins he uses totally the wrong spin (left). I think the only reason he pots the ball is that the cueball is 'thrown' to the right, thus making it an extremely fine cut. If he's making it with left spin then you could play this with no side at all (far safer) and still make the ball.
This is true. I recommend outside English on back cuts, as the spin will throw the object ball to the thin side. Inside spin is usually reserved for frozen rail shots.
Vc é top🙌👏👏
Ya know on planes they say check now where your nearest exit is in case of an emergency and it may be behind you. Well, check to see if the pool pro is a great explainer who'll save your game in an emergency and he may be behind (or younger) than you. Point. Case. Win. Also, disregard any negative comments proffered by less than great pool players here in your comments section who'll find anything from (pocket size, video pauses, extra verbiage - i like that) to diss you.
HEY PEOPLE, if you don't want to hear him, mute your machine. D'oH! i actually put on the annotations as I have a lot of background noise here in Manhattan, NY so I enjoy your explanations. For example "I like the long cut because it's a beautiful shot; beautiful - yeah when its executed beautifully which happens to me 2 times out of ten but there's always room for improvement and isn't that the point here?
Keep those videos coming, this one totally helped my game by remembering to "aim for the miss" and a simple yet fantastic explanation for using spin and backspin. Jeez where were you 7 years ago when I was, and am still, struggling with those cut shots. Banks are my strength, but ya need to be good all-around or in your case great all -around.
Well said, Phil...the kid is doing a good job in terms novice players can understand. Why in the world, if all you can do is make negative BS comments, would someone spend the time to watch? The hot shot criticism freaks should be out hustling for big dough. I doubt any of them could take you in a heads-up match.
Very good instruction and wish you had more to learn from. Aplus 12:55
nice haven't seen that in a long time
Magic.
I have trouble with the reverse cut by corner pocket i had to master it same way hes explaining because its super important shot in one pocket
You are a great shot. For teaching purposes beginners may be putting opposite spin than that of which you are describing, mixing up right spin and right English. Clarify where you hit your cue ball.
You are very good
It is not so much the spin of the object ball that is causing it to go into the rail. More so, it is caused by the direction of the cueball's force. When the cueball touches the object ball, the direction of that touching-force is toward the rail. Some of that touching-force's direction does indeed causes the object ball to spin, but the predominant reason of it's railward diversion (off the line of centers) is the direction of the frictional force during impact.
Can you show me where your pointing the cue and where on the other ball. I'm practicing
You should diagram this on a white board...
Or use chalk on the felt...
Damn you make some bad ass shots look easy.
The only thing better than understanding how the cue ball “spin” can “throw” the object ball is having “young eyes.” Make these shots now because they will get much, much harder the older you get. Good video instruction - thanks for posting.
Disagree.