The concept NO ONE's teaching you! Position Play Returns!

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  • čas přidán 22. 06. 2024
  • What's up guys! This mini tip about cue ball play is designed for the mid-range player out there who may still struggle with running the last ball or two. Or maybe you don't struggle, but never put this concept to work!
    Either way, check it out, and let me know what you think about this 8-ball and 9-ball position play strategy!
    Alex's Match:
    • THE GIRL CAN PLAY 2!! ...
    Mike's Match:
    • APA 8-Ball Match! SL ...
    #pool #apa #poolplayer #8ballpool #ball #
  • Hry

Komentáře • 140

  • @coderman1
    @coderman1 Před 8 dny +12

    always bank, thats what gets all the ladies fired up

  • @davegreen1104
    @davegreen1104 Před 8 dny +5

    Hey Drew. Nice job on the video. At 12:31 where you talk about your favorite shot being the kick shot I suggest that showing that shot as a viable choice isn’t good for the 4’s on your team. Even as a joke it’s a good way to give away ball in hand instead of playing safe and leaving the table in some control of the situation. I like that you play most of the shots center cue ball

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      Oh man, yeah, this was definitely tongue-in-cheek Dave. I hate kick shots haha and I’m terrible at them! If you see my videos and see my wildly miss kick shots and give up ball-in-hand all the time, you’d get it 😂
      But you’re right, 4’s kick a ball thats cuttable/bankable, is one time where I will USUALLY yank a timeout. No sense in giving the opponent ball-in-hand for no reason whatsoever!! Especially when the kick is likely gonna leave you on the rail afterwards anyway!!!
      Thanks for the feedback!!! 👊🏼👊🏼

    • @Rabid-Pinocchio
      @Rabid-Pinocchio Před 3 dny

      This may take a minute to describe but if you practice it kick-shot fear and various single bank shots will become relatively easy. I wish I could give you a diagram but bear with me. If you are trying to kick a ball that is on the Left side of the table relative to where the cue-ball is envision a large mirror on the Right side of the table (the direction that you are shootin at to hit the rail and then kick into the object ball) anyway imagine the mirror and mentally picture where your object ball would be in the mirror image. Now don't pay attention to anything else, Aim your cueball directly at that mirrored object ball and you will ALWAYS hit your intended ball as long as you don't add spin (when you have developed this technique you can start utilizing spin too but at first try to avoid spin because it will definately impact your accuracy. Likewise this technique can be used to play bank shots, just envision where the pocket that you are trying to bank into is in the mirror and shoot your object ball as iff you are aiming directly into the mirrored pocket. The physics of this would make sense to you if you had a diagram but the physics are very obvious and simple and if you practice this until it becomes natural, kick and bank shot fear will become a thing of the past.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 2 dny

      @@Rabid-Pinocchio I can tell exactly what you mean! That’s a very handy perspective!

  • @TheHumanAnonymous
    @TheHumanAnonymous Před 8 dny +2

    Nice video man! Love to see these common shots broken down and talked about more in depth. Keep up the great content

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      He’s STILL solo-dolo baby. Thanks a ton man !!! 👊🏼👊🏼

  • @beelzaBob
    @beelzaBob Před 7 dny +1

    I don't know if you mentioned this or not, but when you showed the running English to open up the angle (~13:30): don't use any follow, just the left side of the ball.
    I remember when I first started using English, I would always keep follow or draw in there, too -- especially follow. When you keep that follow in, you don't get as much action off the rail. When you use slow-medium speed, the English really takes off the rail. (Obviously in this case you want slow speed, but the speed that works the best for lengthening an angle is "running-med-slow".)
    It looks so cool, too! That's the best part!

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 7 dny

      I did actually, briefly!
      I saw a video/reel/short recently showing a shot Jayson Shaw did like this, and they noted that using LOW+english helps getting more action.
      So in these shots, I used low+left. I ALSO would always lean towards using top + spin for these shots, so that was a little bit of an eye opener!
      Now I wonder if your suggestion of just left and no top/bottom wouldve been better!
      Thanks for the feedback!!! 👊🏼

  • @chrisdirienzo4235
    @chrisdirienzo4235 Před 8 dny

    Loving the new teaching video. Keep up the great work.

  • @scurtin99
    @scurtin99 Před 6 dny

    Helpful...liked this a lot; simple and straight forward without much techy talk....

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      Thanks! I hope you think twice when you get a little steep on the 7-ball next time!

  • @apexpredatorbilliardstraining

    I am privileged to be your 1000th subscriber! Congratulations on this first milestone! Keep going

  • @davidr.hofstetter7301

    First time watching, first time subscribing. Always looking for new content with excellent analysis. Thanks much!

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      Hey David! Awesome! Tell me, do you ever watch full matches on CZcams (either mine or others)??

  • @Lemmonhead423
    @Lemmonhead423 Před 6 dny

    These are so helpful, especially for SL2-4. Even SL5 and up can learn from these as a refresher and seeing things from a new perspective. Its really important to understand what whitey wants to do naturally and use to spin to manipulate slightly and speed/spin increases difficulty aiming

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 6 dny +1

      Thanks man!!
      I have at least a couple more up my sleeve that I think could be helpful to the APA poolplayer 👊🏼🤙🏼💪🏼

  • @dpbuc32
    @dpbuc32 Před 7 dny

    Just discovered your channel, I have to say this is great content. Keep them coming, we can all learn from this. Novice or advanced it does not matter. Just subbed

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 7 dny

      Awesome!! Thanks a ton!! Welcome on board!

  • @terrythomas4407
    @terrythomas4407 Před 6 dny

    New to your channel. Helpful to understand or somewhat comprehend options. Potting the OB and placing (parking) the CB seem to be the biggest issues. Creativity might be next. Great job!

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      I always tell my players to get really good at potting before you start to really unwind position play. From experience, I can assure you this game becomes INCREDIBLY frustrating when you know what you need to do, but you just miss more than you want to..... but yes! Let's get creative!!
      Thanks for coming in ! I've got some cool stuff coming 💪🏼👊🏼

  • @georgepotter353
    @georgepotter353 Před 8 dny

    Excellent video with ez to understand explanation. I'm going to send this to the 3's and 4's on my team. One thing that I will add to though, is that if you're cutting the ball from a good distance down table it's much harder to hold, and much harder to make with spin. From where their two shots originated, I would tell my player not to even consider trying to hold from there. Just use the shot you're most comfortable with, but just a bit more juice in the follow through. You do great work. Very much appreciate.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      Thank you so much George, really appreciate that 👊🏼
      Yes, I agree. The shot Alex took on the 13 ball was incredibly difficult, and I really learned something myself trying to hit both with JUICE and with SPIN. Holy deflection, Batman. Agree that I would just hit the shot as ‘true’ as you can, but with some steam behind it so you don’t get stuck in the mud 💯💯
      I never ask my teammates to use spin, UNLESS they’re comfortable with it. I cringe everytime I hear a captain try to suggest “inside spin” to their 3 during a timeout 🫠
      Just wanted to introduce some spin concepts for knowledge more than anything! Thanks for the feedback!!

  • @noahb203
    @noahb203 Před 6 dny +1

    You got a follow out of me on this video! Great content and simple delivery of some basic concepts that we all need to master.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 6 dny

      Awesome Noah! That’s all I’m trying to do here, just talk about the *actual* important concepts that seem to get missed! Let’s see how many we can clear up!!!
      Thanks for the feedback and for the sub!!

    • @nickwilliams4621
      @nickwilliams4621 Před 14 hodinami

      Ya me also

  • @howardfierman8859
    @howardfierman8859 Před 17 hodinami

    Yes, I'd like to see more position videos. I'm a first time watcher and a highly skilled player. I like your presentation and voice. I shall look forward to watching your videos. I realize that you profit from my participation and I shall gladly patronize you. Good luck.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 16 hodinami

      I assure you, at least at this time, the work I put into the videos FAR outweighs profit, but hopefully someday!! Thank you for your participation!!
      It’s good to know that this is still good content for the highly skilled as I’m SURE you are aware of this concept! My goal here is to make the higher skill play concepts digestible for the mid-range players still learning 👊🏼🤙🏼
      Thank you for your input!! 🙏🏼

  • @nickwilliams4621
    @nickwilliams4621 Před 14 hodinami

    Always good to See how others hit and play a shot opens up different ideas other than practicing the shots..

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 14 hodinami

      Yes it is! I wish there were more people making youtube videos back when I was learning in the first year or 3 😬😬 if for nothing else but to see how people play and see the game!

  • @micha-42
    @micha-42 Před 3 dny

    Great vid man! I've learned to _rarely_ hold, it depends so much on cloth and the minute amounts of vertical spin / changes of stroke that in tight situations, it's more likely sending it will get you shape. I've played a couple games recently on a UK table, with their wool cloth, and holding on these is a breeze tho! Oh and unrelated: I think you used the word "tangent" a couple times while there were no tangents to be seen.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 2 dny

      I agree!
      Is that why the brits hold the cue ball so well in their 8-ball matches?!?!? WOOL?! 😂😂😂😂 (and the tiny cue ball)
      Yes, sorry, I’ve addressed my “tangent” vocabulary several times in the comments 🤦🏻‍♂️ it won’t happen again. I was egregiously misusing the term 😅

  • @magnusderwagnus
    @magnusderwagnus Před 8 dny

    That concept seem to be definitely something I should train and include in my shot options.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny +1

      Oh man, for sure know when you gotta send it and when you can't hold it. Honestly don't know how much "training" or "drilling" would be needed for this. A little time spent gauging maybe what the angle looks like when you've run too far/short, but nothing fancy here, just add the Juice 💪
      I can't iterate enough: When you dial up the strength, make sure to keep focus on the shot line and MAKE SURE YOU MAKE THE BALL! That's the pitfall here! Thanks for watching and dropping feedback!

  • @berkeleyltc8568
    @berkeleyltc8568 Před 4 dny

    Hi Drew! I really like this style of video particularly for 8-ball decision making. I hope you make more like this! Maybe one on safety battles? -Josh

  • @devinshannon2995
    @devinshannon2995 Před 6 dny

    I think that's a great little drill. Seems like it would be great to do before a match. I feel like I have a good instinct on when you can't hold it anymore, but alot of time when I send it, it still ends up a little short. Doing this should help dial it in before a game! Thanks

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      Awesome, thanks! I'm going to double down on this and say, shots like this are GREAT right before a match on the table you are playing on specifically. Seeing how much UMPH you need to get the cue ball down and back will tell your monkey brain lots about the speed of the table and get it a little dialed in before the money hits the felt!
      Thanks Devin!

  • @zanethind
    @zanethind Před 4 dny

    Your video popped up in my recommendations so I just subscribed

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 4 dny +1

      …. You’re not…. THE Zane… are you?!…

    • @zanethind
      @zanethind Před 3 dny

      @@drewvonporte no lol I'm not the singer

  • @Darkslide2AR-FE
    @Darkslide2AR-FE Před 8 dny

    This is an excellent video Drew, knowing when to hold, how to hold and knowing when to send and how to send are highly important in position play. For me as a player I feel it's important to also know when to bank and when to play a defensive shot. I personally leave banks as a last resort and rather go for a defensive shot to try to get ball in hand.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny +1

      That is awesome to hear!!! Thanks for the feedback man!! 👊🏼👊🏼 This takes a lot of time to make these so it’s good to know it was worth it for some people 🤙🏼

    • @Darkslide2AR-FE
      @Darkslide2AR-FE Před 6 dny

      @@drewvonporte got a question, what equipment do you use to shoot your videos? I always wanted to record my APA matches but purely to review it and address errors I have made during them.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 6 dny

      Iphone 15 pro ! 🤯

    • @Darkslide2AR-FE
      @Darkslide2AR-FE Před 4 dny

      @@drewvonporte 🤯 indeed. Very good camera on your phone. I got the Google Pixel 8 Camera is ok not as good as the Pixel 8 Pro.

  • @JamesPlaysPool
    @JamesPlaysPool Před 8 dny

    Great video. Have to say I’m not confident with the thin cuts (dodgy eyesight) so I tend to take a lot more banks on than I probably should…
    I recorded a couple of practice racks at league night on Friday but couldn’t get a place for the tripod high enough to get a good angle to record matches. Might need a new tripod!

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      The bank is often safer, because you ain’t moving whitey, so nothin wrong with that!
      Ah, yeah I use a pretty cheap tripod off of amazon myself, it goes about 7’ high

  • @_Ramen-Vac_
    @_Ramen-Vac_ Před 9 hodinami

    The last three spots are silly to take the shot from ~what I'd do: use mild top-left english and run both those balls up near {not into} the right-hand head pocket. not our right-hand, the other right-hand. That way the opponent has to shoot a cushion-frozen bank, and won't know where the cue ball's going to roll. Having to get-lucky on an 8-shot is vastly annoying. Always annoy whenever humanly possible.

  • @dumbref1459
    @dumbref1459 Před 8 dny

    Great video, I really like the concept.
    Suggestion, your match with Rob where you had a lot of safeties, Recreate some of them and explain where you’re aiming on the ball or rail and whether you are using spin.

    • @georgepotter353
      @georgepotter353 Před 8 dny

      I agree. Too many players have a mindset that "I gotta make a ball" on every shot, even if making a ball other than whack and hope just isn't possible. All the while passing up either an easy safety, or just considering leaving your opponent long and with a cut shot. I have a 3 on my team that I'm trying to get that through too. He can make lights out shots, but every shot is hard and with the same speed, and he's going for it even with no clear path to any pocket. I keep telling him, keep working on your stroke, it's good. But, learn to play more of a thinking game and you'll blow right through being 4 and be at least a solid 5 in no time.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      I did a video like this, that [at the time] did get good feedback, though it was very primitive compared to how I can make the videos now. It was with a safety battle with Rob 😅
      I was thinking about diving into our last match with Rob and the safety struggle we had at the end and breaking apart what I was looking at. It's not as cut-and-dry, compared to this, where I know a lot of people are going to disagree and or not see it the same way or think it could've been done better... But yes, it could likely help shed some light on those trying to learn the safety side of things!
      I love One Pocket, and playing that for 1-2 sessions alone, made me realize *what* the safety game in 8-ball really was! Could try and include some things..... hmmmm....... 🤔🤔🤔

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      @@georgepotter353 That's awesome though. I always say when I'm trying to help newer players, "I can teach you the game, but it's very hard to teach someone to make balls". If they can make balls, they've got the athletic portion out of the way, and it's time teach them CHESS 😈😈😈 (I know, harder to convince some, than others, but still 🤣)

  • @apexpredatorbilliardstraining

    A shot definitely that is not talked about! Not a big fan of 8 ball played it all my life so I am more invested in 10 and 9 ball! Regardless of that the shot is dicey one and the knowledge shared here is crucial! I have and idea of how I would play it as well but the reminder is helpful tbh! The reverse spin shot three you did you could have also showed the inside spin version as well!

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 6 dny

      It’s true! It’s just a concept that I feel like never gets mentioned!! Thank you for this feedback!!! 👊🏼👊🏼👊🏼

  • @jasonnieuwenhuis7995
    @jasonnieuwenhuis7995 Před 16 hodinami

    Yup good stuff

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 15 hodinami

      Thanks Jason! 🤙🏼🤙🏼👊🏼👊🏼

  • @procrastinator6902
    @procrastinator6902 Před 8 dny

    For the first shot, I'm going down table and back but using some inside spin to avoid having to play short side shape on the next ball.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny +1

      I definitely had the most success with this! And surprisingly the inside spin was much easier to make this than the outside spin..... ?! ..... (Despite my reluctance to ever lean into inside spin)

    • @procrastinator6902
      @procrastinator6902 Před 8 dny

      @@drewvonporte Ah I see that now, just got thru the video! Yeah I've noticed your hate for inside spin is a bit of a theme in your videos 😂 I understand it but strangely enough, I learned inside spin and using it before outside so I don't hate it quite as much but it's definitely the harder of the two to properly aim.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      @@procrastinator6902 exactly man I freaking miss with inside !! 😂😂 At least, I USED to miss. I feel like I’ve gotten a lot better in the past year and it’s screwing me over less and less…
      I feel like avoiding inside was part of a bigger movement to “play higher percentage shots and ensure you keep shooting”… because I would miss the inside stuff. It’s coming along though!!
      For the record, on using Inside on Mike’s shot. The dot on the table is still there from Mike’s shot during the last sequence of using inside spin…. WELL further from where I was using it on the 7-ball, if you still think you could hold it with inside!

  • @Lemmonhead423
    @Lemmonhead423 Před 7 dny

    Almost to 1k!

  • @procrastinator6902
    @procrastinator6902 Před 8 dny

    On number two, probably hold this one with some bottom inside. The inside lets you hit the shot a bit thicker which reduces how far the cue ball gets from you after contact. And the spin not only gets you a good angle, but allows you to keep the shot pretty soft and still make the shot because a spinning ball gets more action than a sliding ball hit at the same speed.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny +1

      Man, comparing Mike's shot to the latter portion of the video, where I demo the inside spin shot you're talking about.... that's thin as hell...! That would be a very difficult shot! And this is the part where I set it up and say "put your money where your mouth is then!" 🤣🤣🤣

    • @procrastinator6902
      @procrastinator6902 Před 8 dny

      @@drewvonporte Absolutely difficult, for sure! And in a match scenario, I may end up falling flat on my face but I'm ok with it. I don't think it can get much flatter based on past experiences! 🤣 Which brings up a point that certainly adds to the difficulty: We can line these shots up many times, and maybe even successfully pull them off but replicating other important factors (stress, pressure, confidence level, stakes, how tired we may be, etc) is next to impossible and that not only affects how we shoot but which shot we'll attempt altogether 🙂

    • @procrastinator6902
      @procrastinator6902 Před 8 dny

      ​@@drewvonporte Actually scratch that, I'm sending that one too!! I watched his again and see that his cue ball is MUCH further back and thinner than I'd thought the shot originally was. I guess I was thinking of it being closer to where you'd started those shots from the paper savers at 14:05 and couldn't figure out why you thought it was a particularly difficult attempt. I'm gonna correct myself on this one and save the likely faceplant for a shot with a potentially better payoff 🤣🤣

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      @@procrastinator6902 sorry, just now saw your response and recoil 😂😂😂 ha fair!

  • @goba44
    @goba44 Před 8 dny

    For medium bad angles, also dont forget the Drag shot. Karl Boyes has a good video on it.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      I checked it out! But haven't had a ton of time to work on it myself yet....... 😅

  • @KeithJawahir
    @KeithJawahir Před 6 dny

    paused it at 7:22 to say this. a harder strike will cause the CB to square up more, and especially on a diamond table will create a shorter angle.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny +1

      I'm familiar with this concept of tightening the angle with some juice when talking about BANKS... Have not thought about it with rail position, which should apply...! In this case, speed of landing the cue ball is sort of important, but still!
      This is a great comment!!

  • @9ballwithstickrod
    @9ballwithstickrod Před 3 dny

    Great video. I have a 9 ball channel that I do with my phone. I don't have a camera or a computer so I don't edit. I'm in the APA in the northern Kentucky league and my team is " High Flyers "

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 3 dny +1

      That’s awesome! I’ll check it out!! Thanks for the feedback STICKROD!!! 👊🏼👊🏼

  • @johngies4024
    @johngies4024 Před 8 dny

    If there is no traffic, i prefer to send it. Great video

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      If I’m in stroke, I think i use inside to hold it there……… I think… depends how much cash is on the rail 😅
      Thanks!!!

  • @Trang-A-Lang
    @Trang-A-Lang Před 7 dny

    As a 3 in APA, position is a new concept that I’m learning and defense is just as difficult but how early should I be thinking about a defensive shot if I have a couple balls that are tied up? What other factors would determine it? How open their balls are? Their shot making ability? Where the 8 ball is laying?

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 6 dny +1

      The answer… is Yes. To all of that!
      BUT- if you ask me- I mostly judge how offensive I can play, based on who I am playing. The more important question is:
      Are they going to be able to get out on their next turn (or two turns)?
      At the SL-3 level, for my teammates, I recommend you play little defense. At that level, you really are just racing to finish the table first. Get good at making balls right now, like all the shots. Just START to learn how to move the white ball.
      If you start with a foundation of being a Good Shotmaker, that will carry you through 96% of your matches and you will do well 💪🏼
      Once you can start running balls, you start looking at how to shape balls.
      Every once in awhile a REALLY good and easy, high-yielding safe comes up in the endgame that I would call a timeout and suggest for my 3’s. See my video on the strongest safety you can play!
      Other than that, just become a good shooter for now and enjoy it!

    • @Trang-A-Lang
      @Trang-A-Lang Před 6 dny

      @@drewvonporte thats been my instinct so thats what I work on most but it seems frustrating for my captains when he calls timeouts that I don’t listen to his suggestions when they require me apply things I haven’t practiced like english and shape. There are situations that I find myself in, quite often like almost running out and then being ties up on the 8 so thats why I wanted to ask if there is a general rule of thumb like if you can’t run out in the next 3 shots, you should start playing defense at this this and this time…

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 6 dny

      For one: in Timeouts, I never ask my players to try shots they’ve never taken before, unless it truly is straightforward. It can make them feel completely uncomfortable and feel “lesser” because you’re talking about stuff Way out of their wheelhouse. I want to build up my players! And if they’re having fun playing, they play their best 💪🏼 . New stuff should be addressed before/after league… BUT that’s my 2 cents 🤷🏻‍♂️
      There’s no rule of thumb, but the biggest deciding factor is How Good is the Opponent. If he’s a lot better than you, then you don’t want to break stuff out. Leave it tied up! It means they’ll have to do some real work.
      But if you’re playing someone your range, you will LIKELY succeed in your games, by running as far as you can, then burning your inning by breaking out your balls, and passing it back to them and saying “go ahead and run out then😎”. Generally speaking! And that’s my own philosophy!

    • @Trang-A-Lang
      @Trang-A-Lang Před 6 dny +1

      @@drewvonporte thanks I appreciate your time & insight! Maybe run into next Spring in Vegas 🤗

    • @imanoobtuber
      @imanoobtuber Před 5 dny

      imo the sooner you understand defense the better.
      I suggest you watch some of the Skill Level 7's when they play each other. In my local league, and this may differ, these guys play defense right out that bat.
      Imo, it comes down to the probability of the shot. If it's easier to play defense and leave your opponent bad, you want to play defense rather than going for a shot that's more likely to miss.
      i also play defense when I know i have a problem that i can solve at the current moment. Defense also doesn't always have to tie your opponent up, it could be as simple as sending the cue ball down table for instance and making your opponent do a longer/harder shot.
      another example could be that you see your opponent has an easy run out but most of the balls are going to one pocket. a defensive shot could be blocking the pocket and then sending the cue ball down the table.
      another example would be if the 8 ball is lying bad. you send the 8 and the cue ball to the opposite ends forcing your opponent to either bank or play a safety themselves.
      as a 3 if you learn defense you will be able to keep up with 5's. from there it's just shot making ability and positioning.

  • @zanethind
    @zanethind Před 4 dny

    For Alex's shot if I was making the stripe ball I would make sure to go two rails to get back on the last stripe ball but honestly I'd tried to play safe somehow a kick shot. For Mike's shot I would obviously go two rails to get back to the 7 for position

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 4 dny +1

      It’s tough to play safe that far away, especially with her 1-ball hanging in the side!….. but I feel you! The shot was BAD juju from the jump!
      It wasn’t until I set it up myself and looked at how thin it was and how far it was that I was like “………!”
      Thanks for the sub! I’m curious, do you watch pool matches at all too? Or just in it for the interesting position situations?? I’ll be doing both but I’m trying to get a feel!

    • @zanethind
      @zanethind Před 4 dny

      @@drewvonporte yeah it's a tough shot.
      I do watch pool matches too and I watch videos like this one because I'm interested in the game and I want to get better and learn more. Also I'm curious how others play certain shots

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 4 dny +1

      @@zanethind awesome! Welcome in 👊🏼

    • @zanethind
      @zanethind Před 4 dny

      @@drewvonporte thanks

  • @LetsTravelOurWorld
    @LetsTravelOurWorld Před 8 dny

    In the examples you showed by far the best way is to use inside english to widen the cue ball. Doing this can make getting position on a lot of shots much easier - certainly easier than going up and down. Having said that, players should learn to go up and down (sending it) and how to use english to widen the cue ball. Once you practice this a bit it really is not hard and can help you win a lot of games.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny

      Awesome! Thank you so much for this feedback!
      How “easy” (quoting you: “..really is not hard”) it is to hit such a soft shot with THAT much spin…. isn’t something I’d consider very easy. Gotta have really good stroke mechanics, then maybe!
      Most players at a SL-4 range are definitely still working on perfecting a good stroke (as am i 😂). Maybe easy for some, but idk. I would recommend sending it myself, and would only shoot the inside spin-and-hold shot if I was in-stroke but 🤷🏻‍♂️
      REGARDLESS- thanks for your input!! Being familiar with this situation is most important 👊🏼

    • @LetsTravelOurWorld
      @LetsTravelOurWorld Před 8 dny

      @@drewvonporte I think there are shots that are easy to master with only a couple of hours of practice and those shorter inside shots are one of them.
      I used to think these shots were hard. Then I watched a Tor Lowry video on them and actually spent about three hours just practicing them. For me it was relatively easy to figure the shot out.
      And once you do, that shot opens up huge position play advantages as you showed in your video. I think people get intimidated with certain shots - but hitting them hundreds of times makes them much easier.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 6 dny +1

      Tor’s stuff is so good 🔥
      I appreciate the perspective! I can tell you are passionate about the game. I’m going to take your advice, and work on this with my SL-5. I still feel like it’s a tough shot for your average SL-4 but I digress!!
      Thank you for this feedback and I look forward to more from you in the future!!

  • @Rabid-Pinocchio
    @Rabid-Pinocchio Před 3 dny

    I've only watched about 1 minute but you asked what they could do better. This is something that most players will miss but the first person has a much better stroke. An element of the stroke that is paramount is a pause at the back of the stroke before you strike the ball. Weaker players will have a see-saw action where they feather the ball a few times and then draw back and shoot forward in one, hurried, action. A seasoned player with a good stroke will feather a few times then draw back, at the back of the stroke they will pause slightly, and then shoot forward it a single motion. I absolutely guarantee that no matter what level of player you are if you develop this technique as a natural part of your stroke you will improve your aim as well as your cue-ball control. A word of caution, players trying to practice this will at first feather, draw back and pause, then draw back slightly then shoot forward. This action ruins the gain from pausing and so reallly pay attention to what you are doing. So, back to the question, what can you notice wrong? The Second player needs to work on his stroke. Speaking of stroke, at about 3.23 your are demonstrating a shot trying to sink the 2 and get position on the Black. If you watch your own stroke you shoot and move the butt of the cue to the Right as you are striking the ball... Bad habit, I would work on that...

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 2 dny

      This is great feedback!
      Personally, I don’t feel like my mechanics are strong enough to teach that sort of stuff here… at least not yet! That being said, I’m seeing what you mean in my stroke and it’s something I’m going to look into 👀
      I’m sure Alex and Mike’s stroke isn’t perfect yet either, as they are 4’s and still evolving their stroke each week, but that’s a good look!
      Regarding the pause, I was always taught the pause wasn’t always a requirement. Some players have a big pause (Neils, Melling), while some barely pause. I’ve personally gone back and forth with how much of a pause I use…
      Most of all, thanks for this valuable feedback !💎

    • @Rabid-Pinocchio
      @Rabid-Pinocchio Před 2 dny

      @@drewvonporte I'd like to address something that you said, that you don't "always" have to have a pause. That advice is difinitively wrong. It is true that there are some shots that are so easy that you can have a poor stroke and still get away with it but if you want to get good your stroke should be the same for every single shot, it should be reflex and you should never never deviate from it. The pause, and I absolutely will guarantee this, will 100% improve your aim as well as your control of spin and weight. The length of the pause is not important, it could be a Tenth of a Second or a Second or Two. The point is to pause. I'll spare you the phsiological explanation but just practice it and you absolutly will notice a differance in your %success. If you're playing APA and coaching, remind your players to pause as part of your advice. I understand the idiotic nature of the handicap structure of APA and to some degree it is prudent to not advance too much but that said, every single player who wants to get good should make this habit an integral part of EVERY stroke. To cement this idea I will challenge you to find a video clip of any successful player, pool, snooker, 3-cushion billiards, whatever you like and see if you can find one player that is reasonably successful that doesn't pause on their stroke. All good players do it, Why do you suppose that is? It is because it works. With all due respect whomever told you that you don't 'always" have to do that is an idiot. As I said, your stroke should be the same every single time no matter what shot you are taking.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před dnem

      I’m going to be humble and admit right now. I just came back from a practice session.
      I really focused on the pause……….. and I shot lights out. I rarely missed a ball, seriously.
      Now I have gone back and forth on how long I should pause, and focusing on it. Anytime I’ve focused on the pause and lengthened it enough to be noticeable, I’ve shot very well.
      Idk what happened between now and then, but circling back, and thinking about this comment, has done a lot. I hope to show up for it in the next match I can film 💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼 thank you! 👊🏼

  • @fugglesme4186
    @fugglesme4186 Před 8 dny

    Back when I was an instructor many of my clients wanted me to teach them how to make shots. Aiming systems etc. And I would look at their stroke and the mechanics were terrible. Not consistent enough to make balls consistently. They didn't want to hear that. They just wanted to make balls.
    On Alex's shot I would not hold. I like your 2 rail center ball for skill level 4s. Personally I shoot the 2 rail with high inside. For Mike's shot I might try to draw into the 7 with low outside. Otherwise I would play it like Alex's with high inside. I also like your 3 rail with just outside. For skill level 4's this is a tough one.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny +1

      Awesome! Glad to hear the instructor is at least on the same page as me and not telling me I’m offering bad advice! 😂
      Yeah, I just wanted to emphasize “do something”, don’t just hit it soft/medium ball because that’s ALWAYS a loser! Just hitting hard center ball will give you a chance!!
      The spin was more or less to shed some light on english… which was such a confusing concept for me when I was figuring things out 🤯🤨
      Thank you Fuggles!!!! 👊🏼👊🏼

  • @coldred9639
    @coldred9639 Před dnem +1

    Great idea! ❤it! Subscribed bud 🤬COLDRED🥶

  • @caseymccoy2692
    @caseymccoy2692 Před 8 dny

    Thank you...

  • @mattevans1643
    @mattevans1643 Před 6 dny +1

    Big tip, no one ever teaches. If you have to look at a shot for more than a few seconds, it's the wrong shot. But if you're spending all that time working out the angles, there's always an easier way to play your shot. Your time should be spent figuring out how to get to the next ball, you ahould already knlw what's going to happen to your object ball, now you're just trying to figure out cue ball position.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      Again, 100% agree with the last thing you said. I'm not sure how I feel about the speed of decision making. We go back and forth on the channel on that A LOT (lol). I do make decisions more with my gut and what feels natural to MY game, but the engineers out there that play, I know like to assess a little more first, which I'm done criticizing...
      Regarding the last thing you said, this is what I tell my SL-4's. At this point, you understand what is mathematically achievable to making the object ball, no longer should you be thinking about that. It goes, or it doesn't, now it's time to Move the Rock. 😎
      I appreciate your input Matt, you're good people 👊🏼

  • @chamoixyt
    @chamoixyt Před 3 dny

    4 would be the last shot before I would shoot it. (personally I wouldn't class 5 as an easy shot - for me it would be low %).

  • @sideshowrob5453
    @sideshowrob5453 Před 7 dny

    3:10 That's not the tangent line. The tangent line is a line that intersects with the contact point at 90 degrees to the radius of the ball (a line from the centre of the ball to the contact point).

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 7 dny +1

      Youre right, thats not the actual tangent line. It’s just where the cue ball is going as a rolling cue ball. I’m using the words “tangent line” pretty liberally, my apologies 😔
      Hopefully that’s not tripping up the point 😅

    • @sideshowrob5453
      @sideshowrob5453 Před 7 dny

      ​@@drewvonporte Yeah. I'm a pedant at the best of times. But I think it's especially important to use terms correctly when in an educational setting. You might know the difference, but the people who are learning from you might not.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 7 dny +1

      @@sideshowrob5453 100%
      I guess if people are actually gonna watch these videos (this one blew up 🤯🤯), I need to tidy the details!!!
      I welcome feedback like this in future videos, thank you! 👊🏼

    • @sideshowrob5453
      @sideshowrob5453 Před 7 dny +1

      @@drewvonporte Yeah. No worries. I didn't want to come across as rude. Just wanted to point it out.
      Cheers.
      Best of luck to ya.

    • @TheWalterAZ
      @TheWalterAZ Před 6 dny

      It's the "refraction " line for the cue ball.... angle of incidence = angle of refraction.

  • @mattevans1643
    @mattevans1643 Před 6 dny

    To be fair that's really awkard position for that shot. With outside english, which is to the center of the table you have the best chance of getting shape on the next ball. As it will turn into running english which might get around the table, you could also just shoot with running english. Or if your really spicy, just wack it with nothing but follow. Should come back down table far enough.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      I like this. You're not wrong at all!
      I was gearing this towards my own SL-4's who are just starting to dabble with english (left/right spin), and emphasize "don't just hit this and end your run immediately. Give yourself a shot at SOMETHING!".
      But yes, I would spin this ball as well I think if I'm sending it. Personally, I feel like going 3 rails (your first suggestion, with outside) actually has a lesser chance to scratch and larger room to land in!
      Thanks for adding this!

  • @imanoobtuber
    @imanoobtuber Před 5 dny

    isn't the tangent line 90 degrees from the shot line? the tangent line looks less than that here.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      It is, yes! I addressed this in another comment, but maybe I should pin one at the top :/
      For whatever reason, I've always just called the cue ball's path the "tangent line". I learned a lot later in my pool life that the tangent line is very specific and a fixed line. Since people are actually gonna watch this (lol 7k! I can't believe it!), I need to tighten things up. I don't want to confuse people... My apologies!!!
      Thank you for your feedback, and I absolutely welcome comments like this!

    • @imanoobtuber
      @imanoobtuber Před 5 dny

      @@drewvonporte no worries! you're doing an amazing job! When you're editing the videos you could add the tangent line in a different color maybe? that way people who don't understand what it is can visually see it.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      @@imanoobtuber awesome thanks !!!
      Personally, I don’t “like” the tangent line itself. I feel like it’s not common for the cue ball to take the path of the tangent line, as it usually requires stun or pounding at shots, idk.
      Sometimes I get worried I’ve gone a little too Bob Ross with all the colors and lines, so I’m hesitant to add another for posterity? Idk. BUT- I will address it when it’s important!!
      Thanks again for feedback! I’m still figuring out a lot 🤙🏼🤙🏼👊🏼

    • @imanoobtuber
      @imanoobtuber Před 5 dny

      @@drewvonporte totally understand the first paragraph.
      for new players though they do need to understand it as when you add follow or draw you need a point of reference first.
      Lots of new players in my league have zero idea of what it is and become bewildered when their draw or force follow shots didn't get the cue ball where they wanted it to go. Then you explain the tangent line and voila, it starts to click for them.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 4 dny

      I’m going to start thinking more about this and the tangent line. Really

  • @jasonjohnstonbaugh1080

    At 3:12, that isn't the tangent line. The tangent line is always a direct 90° line perpendicular to the pocket line you are shooting the ball on. You're probably referring to the natural rolling cue ball path. Telling players that you are showing the tangent isn't correct at all. This could confuse a lot of beginning players when trying to learn the actual tangent line when stunning the ball and trying to utilize it for cue ball control. Good video though.

    • @EdMrEasy
      @EdMrEasy Před 5 dny

      Exactly.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      It is, yes! I addressed this in another comment, but maybe I should pin one at the top :/
      For whatever reason, I've always just called the cue ball's path the "tangent line". I learned a lot later in my pool life that the tangent line is very specific and a fixed line. Since people are actually gonna watch this (lol 7k! I can't believe it!), I need to tighten things up, because that's just sloppy. I don't want to confuse people... My apologies!!!
      Thank you for this feedback, it's important, and I absolutely welcome comments like this!

    • @bertinlosier7865
      @bertinlosier7865 Před dnem

      Yeah. I love this idea of this drill, will most likely incorporate in my training schedule.
      When i heard you say tangent, i cringed a little. I know you know it wasn’t.
      It’s amazing how many people can’t explain tangent, rolling ball exit angle, rolling ball, forced follow, stun variations, etc.
      Geat video,
      Bertin

  • @JohnCarterRocks
    @JohnCarterRocks Před 4 dny

    Without English I stop at spot 3 before I go up and back down table.

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 4 dny

      That’s fair! It started getting pretty dicey after that 😳
      Thanks for the input!!

  • @cheguevara1233
    @cheguevara1233 Před 7 dny

    Are you beginer player ?

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 6 dny +1

      I wouldn’t call me a beginner, no?
      I could see how you could think that if you watch me play some though 😂🤡😂

    • @cheguevara1233
      @cheguevara1233 Před 5 dny

      @@drewvonporte What Aiming method do you use?

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 5 dny

      Point-and-shoot! Idk!

  • @NewWorldRubio
    @NewWorldRubio Před 8 dny

    Second

  • @wliva76
    @wliva76 Před 8 dny

    No one is teaching you, because then you wouldnt be a 4

    • @drewvonporte
      @drewvonporte  Před 8 dny +1

      I was a 4 for a very long time! Like a 5 year-old pound pup, they said I couldn’t be trained 🦮