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Thread: self-help for under 30 break players ...

  1. #1
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    Mar 2008
    This is DandyA's Country Flag

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    Default self-help for under 30 break players ...

    having recently cracked the 30 barrier (with a fabulous 31 and two 30 breaks after many years sub 30), I was wondering if it would be helpful to others at this level to have a thread to ourselves where we can discuss our play and help each other to improve ... a self-help thread ...

    anyone interested?

    coaches are welcome as long as they restrict their advice to getting from xx to xx+1 (32 is my next objective) ... players with a 50+ break are not welcome ... start your own thread and stop poking fun at us LOL ...

    I feel I can describe some of the things that helped me to go from a humble 13 break (pink and black, the last 2 colours) to the heady heights today (as mentioned, 31) ...

    but it takes two to tango ... so if you're interested in this self-help thread, please reply

  2. #2
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    May 2010
    This is stiltsky's Country Flag

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    Okay as i'm in this elite group

    Working out 1/2 ball angles so you know the 1/2 ball angle anywhere on the table has helped me alot in the last few weeks, I feel a corner about to be turned.

    I find anything inside 1/2 ball angle towards 3/4 ball I can pot more easily as a result of knowing the 1/2 ball angle.

  3. #3
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    Dec 2011
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    Great idea!

    As one who once cracked 20 (never since repeated!) I really welcome this.

    One thing that has helped me a lot lately is that I've bought a child's table off Ebay and put it in my garage.

    Now I can go out and practice potting without having to go to the snooker hall, and without thinking 'this is costing me £6 an hour' etc etc.

    OK I know that it's nowhere near what you get on a full size table but seems to help in potting practice quite a lot.

    Cheers.

  4. #4
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    Apr 2012

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    I'm starting to knock in 20-30s on a regular basis now and I feel the main thing that has helped me is play at YOUR own natural rythym.
    If I get bogged down and start thinking to much I may aswell go home.
    Plus - shot selection!! Denying a straight red for a harder one can sometimes be the correct shot.

  5. #5
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    Apr 2012

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    I'm starting to knock in 20-30s on a regular basis now and I feel the main thing that has helped me is play at YOUR own natural rythym.
    If I get bogged down and start thinking to much I may aswell go home.
    Plus - shot selection!! Denying a straight red for a harder one can sometimes be the correct shot.

  6. #6
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    My main problem at the mo is ANGLES.

    When I want to hit a straight shot I often hit it at an angle, when I want to angle a shot it goes straight!

  7. #7
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    This is LittleMissAlexa's Country Flag

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    technique is pointless if you dont understand the spin i would suggest practice with different spins to get used to it and watch how it spins
    Goddess Of All Things Cue Sports And Winner Of The 2012 German Masters and World Open Fantasy Games and the overall 2011-12 Fantasy Game

  8. #8
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    I must admit I try not to put side on the ball, im still getting my cue action right, just use top and back spin, a good piece of advice I was given is to get you're own play style over a bit of time as khaos said and work on you're cue action etc, knowing how the cue ball reacts is great but not much use if you not putting the cue straight as you're not going to contact it where you want, its such a hard game, work from the basics up and you'll start to see improvements, worry about too much and it'll get frustrating very quickly

  9. #9
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    This is nrage's Country Flag

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    Quote Originally Posted by LittleMissAlexa View Post
    technique is pointless if you dont understand the spin i would suggest practice with different spins to get used to it and watch how it spins
    IMO, If you're a sub-30 break player (as I am) you should not be using side spin intentionally, except perhaps for the break off shot, and on safety where you need to widen or narrow the angle. I reckon if you're (not you specifically, just ppl in general) a sub-30 break player, using spin on more than 1/10 shots, you may be relying on it too much, like a crutch, and would do well to make better position where it was not required... but that's just my opinion.

    I think technique is very important, if you cannot consistently cue straight, you will only ever make a decent break if you get a little bit lucky (cue straight 6 times in a row, for example). That said, you have to avoid becoming obsessed with it to the exclusion of all else. I worked on my technique for ages, and it's generally "ok" now, but I wasn't seeing much improvement overall. It didn't help that I wasn't practicing enough, but that's another story for another day.. in short, practice more often, even if it's just for a short while.

    Anyway, a short while back a guy I play with off and on said to me, "your technique is fine, you've just got to stop missing easy pots". So, I stopped focusing so much on the technique and just practiced potting. I started with a long line up of just reds (1 below black thru till 2 above blue) and just potted and potted and potted, and immediately saw an improvement, making a 22 and a 24 the next week.

    I found that with a long line of reds, where landing out of position is just about impossible (on the rail or on the line of reds), I could concentrate on the pot itself, and I focused on staying down and watching the balls and giving myself as much feedback as possible. It worked, and my potting (and cueing) became more consistent. More than that, my confidence increased when faced with similar pots in a match. Because the positional requirement was reduced, but not removed entirely (as it is if you just set up a pot manually) it meant I was getting some positional practice, as well as practicing some difficult ones off the rail or from right up close every now and again.

    Once I could pot a bit more consistently it made sense to practice other drills, drills which I would have previously tried and after 2-3 pots missed an easy one and had to start again, now I could progress a lot further.

    I managed to pot 6 blacks off the spot making position each time (i.e. put the white down to start, pot the black, and play from where it lies each time). I managed some high 20 breaks in a conventional (short) line up (1 red below black, 2 above pink, no blue/other colours). I managed to pot several more balls than I would have in several other positional drills.

    All this has allowed me to identify some areas where I need to improve, specifically I have a tendency on hard shots to cue around my chest and strike the left of the white (sending it right and the object left). To compensate I now concentrate on hard pots to keep an even pressure on my chest contact point, and stay as still as possible and 6-7/10 times this now works and I cue well, .. still working on making this unconscious

    I would say the biggest thing I need to improve is my positional play, if I could make "good" position on every pot I would have no trouble making a break over 30, because I am now confident that I can pot the "easy" short range ones with some consistency (8-9/10). The trouble with losing position is that it forces me into playing a hard stun or screw, which given my known cueing fault is more likely (4/10) to go wrong. So I've started working on positional drills, where the pot is as easy as possible, like the blacks off the spot I mentioned earlier, and ..

    Setting the black up, and 3 reds (evenly spaced) to either side. Placing the white in a 3/4 ball, or straighter pot on a red nearest the black, and perhaps 1 ft or less away. Potting the red with stun or just a touch of roll, so it goes on and off the cushion and lands on the black on a similar angle.. my biggest problem is judging the pace of this shot when the angle gets straighter, or less straight than 3/4 ball.

    So, my advice, in short is to spend some time practicing straight cueing (white over the spots, straight pots with top-spin to follow into the pocket) but also to practice potting, and then positional play. Cueing straight, not missing, and making position are the keys to making a break above 30. Higher breaks require more advanced break building, but we're not there yet..

    Enough babbling, hope this helps someone else

  10. #10
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    something i was guilty about in the past was getting too excited and thinking too much into the future.

    Being able to see the next 2-3 shots is excellent, but alot of the time it hampered my cueing / cueball positioning, so now i try to focus on 1 ball at a time and try not to use as much side/follow/draw, and rely more on the natural angles of the cueball.

    i know its pretty negative, but when im not too sure about a pot, il always play the safety and wait for my opponent ( similar skill to me ) to mess up. i constantly would focus too much on the white position and leave the red hanging in the pocket, but whenever he does it, the red/colour would jingle off the jaws and go completly safe, very frustrating!

    i always used to take the plunge and try split the pack while going for a pot which would always screw me over, because again, im thinking too much about the white!

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