Posts Tagged ‘cue ball’

Billiards and “Take a Cue”

Monday, November 30th, 2009


Billiards and “Take a Cue”

By Yossarian Fisher

Physics, aside from being a challenging high school subject, is also the main governing force of all matter in the universe. It also governs how much energy you need to exert on a pool stick when making a break or what direction a ball will bounce off to when it hits another. Of course, we are not going to count the numerical value of energy one has to exert. There is just no way for our mind to convert that information into muscle signals. Instead, this information is learned through practice and experience of playing the game.

Pockets on Every Corner

While it can be said that practice is the essential building block of any good athlete, practicing the game of billiards is an entirely different matter all together. The idea of the game itself is simple, using a stick; a player must poke a white ball -and only the white ball, towards colored balls in an attempt to make them fall into any of six holes on the pool table. For now, let us put aside the fact that there are rules that dictate the order of colors a player must successfully land in the holes, also known as pockets. This leaves us with a very simple of a knock-balls-into-holes kind of game. Is it simple enough?

For more info, visit my websites…
Pool For Beginners
Pool and Pocket Billiards Resource

Not always. In a basic nine ball set up, there will be ten balls in play. One cue ball, and the nine colored billiard balls. These nine balls will not conveniently place themselves in a straight path between the cue ball and a hole. Even if some did, it does not mean that landing one good shot will place your cue ball properly for the next shot. This means that on a basic level, the average pool player is considering how he or she must make the cue ball hit another billiard ball which in turn, would both cause a billiard ball to fall in the pocket and leave the cue ball in a desirable position where it may knock another target into the hole. That alone may seem plenty. There is more though.

Rack ‘Em and Shoot ‘Em

Now we reconsider the previously set aside fact that there are certain pool rules about the order of balls that must be hit.

All that is missing is the fact that if a player fails to successfully pocket a proper ball in his or her turn, then they will lose that turn. So in the event that the player knows that there are not good shots to be made, the player must then play the round with the consideration of placing the cue ball in an equally inappropriate location so the that opponent would not be able to score.

This is why playing billiards is not easy for beginners. There are plenty of things that can only be learned through constant practice. It is amazing when we consider how fast a pool player’s mind quickly calculates the different factors of this game. In tournaments and other major competitions, these players show tremendous ability to concentrate and zone out from the cheering crowd which allows them to pick up that cue stick and still make good shots; and for all the scientific physics that occurs in every game, watching a round of pool is akin to witnessing magic. GP

FSupplement Centre are one of the UK’s leading suppliers of Bodybuilding Supplements providing products such as Weight Gain Powers and Whey Powder.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Yossarian_Fisher
http://EzineArticles.com/?Billiards-and-Take-a-Cue&id=2699568


35 Tips To Pool Domination

Monday, October 12th, 2009

35 Tips To Pool Domination

By Ernie Reynolds

I recently finished and posted for download “35 Tips To Pool Domination”. You can see it in the column to the right. This Ebook is free for readers of this blog and my other pool websites.

I put together these tips as a reminder to myself and to help others to continue to remember and apply the basics when shooting pool. It’s easy to get out of the habit of paying attention to how you are stroking the stick, hitting the cue ball, positioning your leave, and many of the other little things that add up to playing your best pool.

When I find myself missing fairly easy shots, it always helps to make a quick review of how I am shooting and what I am doing wrong. This Ebook can help to drum into your head the obvious and not-so-obvious aspects to maintaining quality poll shooting.

Should you decide to download and read this Ebook, I would be most curious to learn of your opinion as to whether or not you feel it has helped your game to improve. Please leave a comment. Thanks.

Concentrate On Cue Ball Positioning

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

Concentrate On Cue Ball Positioning

By Ernie Reynolds

After you’ve played pool a while, you advance beyond the beginner stage. You get your stroke pretty well established and working smoothly. You know how to hit the balls and aim. In other words, you know your way around the pool table a little better.

This is the time when you should start to work on your cue ball positioning. No matter what game you play, you always want to leave the cue ball in a good position for your next shot. If you get stuck behind a ball or down on the wrong side of the table, there’s a good chance that you will miss your next shot and have to give up your turn.

For more info, visit my websites…
Pool For Beginners
Pool and Pocket Billiards Resource

If you want to win pool games, this is one of the worst thing that can happen. If you don’t maintain control of the table and keep shooting, your opponent will, and he will do his best to run out his balls and win the game.

By taking control of your cue ball positioning, you can greatly increase the likelihood of having good position for your next shot, and therefore have a much better chance of running the table for the win. If you want to improve your pool-shooting skills and win more games you simply have to play better position pool.

Besides making a conscious effort to control the cue ball during games, you should practice with this goal in mind. I like to recreate tough shots I had from previous games, and try to figure out what I should have done differently, to get myself out of trouble. This is a great way to raise your skill level.

Next time you practice, setup a shot on the table and try to make the cue ball travel to a certain spot after taking the shot. Keep trying the same shot, but pick different spots or sections of the table to leave the cue ball. When you can leave the cue ball in the approximate area you picked before the shot fairly consistently, you are making real progress.

This is where your follow, draw, and english skills will really get polished. You will have to use all of them in different shots to get the cue ball position you desire. Don’t forget that how hard you hit the cue ball will also have a major affect on where it ends up on the table.

After you get this working fairly well, try putting some extra balls on the table like you would have during a real game. This forces you to not only attempt to get the cue ball to a certain part of the table, but also to avoid any of the balls that are in the way.

I don’t remember where I first heard the term, but this could certainly be called “scientific practicing”. Anyone can just knock the balls around and call it practicing. If you make the effort to make things a little harder for yourself and work at the game with certain goals in mind, I believe you will get much more out of your practice time, and will get to be a high-level shooter a lot faster.

Play Better Pool With Your Own Cue Stick

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Play Better Pool With Your Own Cue Stick

By Ernie Reynolds

I’ve always been a casual pool player. Don’t get me wrong – I always play to win, but I never had much of a desire to enter tournaments or play in leagues.

As such, I never bothered to get my own pool cue for many, many years. I always just grabbed one off the rack at the bar or pool hall. I never wanted to bother with carrying a cue stick around and having to keep on eye on it so it didn’t get stolen or damaged.

For more info, visit my websites…
Pool For Beginners
Pool and Pocket Billiards Resource

Well, it took me a long time, but I have finally seen the light. My wife bought me a new pool cue for Christmas last year, (I picked it out), and I will never be without my own cue stick again.

This conviction was reinforced last Friday when I went down to the local bar for a cold one and some pool. I didn’t have to work Friday because of the July 4th holiday, so I went down in the early aftenoon instead of later on after work as I usually do.

I had my stick in the car but I didn’t bring it in with me because I wasn’t sure if anyone would be in there to play a game with. As it turns out, I ended up playing pool for a couple solid hours – with a bar cue.

I played a couple guys that were fair shooters and I did OK, but not really up to my usual standards. I had a hard time getting comfortable with the sticks that were there and eventually tried several different ones. None of them really felt right.

Eventually I ended up leaving and going to a pool hall where I have a standing Friday night appointment with my brother to play. I took my stick in with me this time because my brother plays pretty well and I have to be at my best to win some games.

I could tell the difference in my shooting the very first game. The stick just felt comfortable in my hands and I had much more control over the cue ball and could make it dance around the table.

My consistency took a quantum leap. With the bar cue I had to really concentrate to get a good hit on the cue ball. With my own familiar cue, that just came naturally and I could pay more attention to planning out my shots and running the table.

I keep my tip nicely rounded, and this makes the shooting so much more precise than the flattened, mushy tips on the bar cues. I could get some draw on the ball again, and the weight is right, so controlling the speed of the cue ball hit was much easier.

The smooth shaft allows my stick to slide effortlessly through my bridge fingers. It’s amazing the difference in your play when there are no dents and stickiness to the shaft to ruin your feel of the stroke.

It may sound funny, but there really was the difference of night and day between playing with that bar stick and my own clean, smooth, and straight pool cue.

So take it from a late-in-life convert to owning your own pool stick – buy one, you won’t regret it. Once you get a stick that has the right weight and feels good in your hands, it just makes the game of pool all that much easier and more enjoyable.

I just wonder why it took me so long to find out.

Make That Cue Ball Dance!

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

When I go to a pool hall or bar to play some occasional pool, I usually don’t bother to bring my cue stick. Sometimes I forget it and other times I just don’t want to be bothered with carrying it around. I don’t like to leave the stick in my car and expose it to theft or temperature extremes.

On these occasions I just take a stick off the rack to shoot with. You can usually find a fairly straight cue stick if you look around. Most places will have a half decent selection of them available.

One thing I notice about these sticks though, is the cue tips are often slick and shiny. Many racks are broken, games are played, and no one maintains the cue tips. It’s not really anyone’s fault, it’s just the way it is.

Be sure to visit my websites…
Pool For Beginners
Pool and Pocket Billiards Resource

A smooth, slick tip, however, is not conducive to good cue control and the successful use of english. When I try to apply some draw to a shot with one of these sticks, I either get hardly any draw at all or I end up jumping the cue ball up in the air.

Attempting to get some effective side spin on the cue ball just doesn’t work when the cue tip won’t grab the ball enough to really get it spinning. I have a little more luck with follow or top spin, but you can’t shoot a quality game with top spin alone.

Miscues are another consequence of having a cue tip that is too smooth. You can’t get the needed friction on the ball without a little texture on the tip to enable it to hold on to some tip chalk.

Since I don’t have any fancy cue tip tools to roughen up the tip like a tip pick tool or a cue cube scuffer, I took along a small piece of medium grit sand paper to my Friday night pool session. I selected a stick off the rack and ran the sandpaper over the tip a little bit to roughen it up. Once the tip was rough I applied a liberal dose of tip chalk and broke the rack.

WOW! What a difference! Just that small degree of roughness on that cue tip made all the difference in the world to my ability to control that cue ball. With the pits and hollows of the leather allowing places for the chalk to hang on to, I got much more friction on the ball and that tip grabbed that cue ball like it had glue on it.

I started getting exceptional draw on the cue compared to what I was getting earlier. When I put some side english on the shot, the cue ball was spinning around like it was in a pinball game. My cue ball was literally dancing around the table.

I was getting so much action on the cue ball that I had to start toning down my spin. The cue was traveling way beyond where it would normally go with an unroughened tip. It actually made the playing more fun from watching that cue ball dancing and spinning around.

Once I toned it down and got the feel for the new action a game or two later, my cue ball positioning really improved immensely. I won a lot of games that night and had a hell of a good time doing it.

That little piece of sandpaper has a new home in my car now. Hot or cold weather won’t adversely affect it, and I want to make sure I have it available to roughen up my tips from now on. It really made that much of a difference in my playing.

If you play with bar cues, or even if you have your own cue and don’t roughen the tip occasionally, I suggest you try this little trick before your next games of pool. It only takes less than a minute, but makes for a whole night of much-improved pool playing.

Roughen that cue tip, chalk it up good, and make YOUR cue ball dance!