Long Bridges cause more instability in terms of accuracy. Use with caution and remember to keep your stroking arm as still and straight as possible when playing any shot. Only play safety rail shots if you're truly unsure of whether you can make the shot, and don't overrun the cueball. You will always miss the shots you don't try to take, so if it's a high stakes situation and you think you have a chance of making the shot, go for it, but play the cueball long if you miss, at least make it difficult for the opponent to sink their next ball, whether another contact ball or the 8. In terms of bridge length you should always check your line of aim and not only rely on the shot angle. Check angle from the contact ball to the pocket, the cue ball to the contact ball, and of course, from the cue tip to the cueball. Because there are a number of aiming systems available you should take bridge length compensation for field of vision with a pinch of salt. Position is critical when it comes to pool, you are able to play any spin on most shots theoretically by adjusting for throw, drag and swerve. Don't only rely on making the ball to continue moving forward, you must utilise spin to position for your next shot. With shots arching over a ball you want to also be sure to hit towards the center line of the cueball as much as possible. The cue is pointing into the bottom of the cue ball, which means any type of side spin will induce massé spin. As said, you must keep your stroking arm steady and your bridging hand as still as possible. Finally, when you are playing a draw from close, be careful not to elevate too much or you'll lose your draw, and not to strike too straight below center, as you might accidentally cause the cueball to jump. until next time.
Holly..... Once again you made something different! Sooo simple but sooo enjoyable :) You have very nice english pronunciation that I always wanted to have! I struggle with this all the time especially because I speak polish everyday :)
Thanks for your videos! Could you make one focusing on the stance? Where to place your feet, how low to go, how to make a bridge (including over another ball), bridge distance from cue ball, closing one eye etc. If anyone knows any good videos covering this please link me 🙂
what you say is true especially the bridge... you need to have a longer bridge because the Q will help you aim better and make a better shot judgement BUT, everyone can look great on a table with pockets the size of buckets, everything goes in
@@PoolProblems im saying that the traditional pool club tables pockets are way too big, even the workd championship ones are super large, its not hard to look like a world champ in those
I've been doing this for some time now. It works. Would like to add that power shots do not work for me, so I concentrate on shooting softer and using proper English to get shapes for my next shot. Again, power shots are a ball out of control. Just saying
These are good, and your editing is getting really slick btw. I dog the long thin cut all the time, and my eyes want to undercut it every time, so there's no safe miss. If I aim to deliberately overcut, I just overcut. So I will try a longer bridge. PS: even though you're just doing it for the video and not in any serious way, and even though I did it a million times myself, you might want to resist tossing the cue onto the table. I used to think "well no possibility it hurts anything, not this very light toss from a very short distance"... but then one day the cue slid forward, hit the underside of the cushion, and that sent the tip downward and caused a small hole in the cloth. So I just don't do it anymore, as tempting as it is.
Thanks, buddy! Try aiming a tad lower on the cue ball also. I wanted to mention that in this video, but didn't fit the structure. I find that I get to lower my head even more, and that it helps the alignment. Plus, I'll strike more level, taking away the swerve. The cue tossing - noted. Haha! It was a moment of improv, and it definitely hurt my pool soul, but that's just the things you do for fame :P
Which of these tips did you already know about? Comment below!
Amplifying rail grip is my go-to. When my friends say reduce it I say nahh fam.
Didn't have time to watch the video yet, but gotta say I love the thumbnail.
Thanks, I appreciate that!
I’m just trynna beat that one annoying player at the bar
It’s you
Everyone is
Practice, Practice, Practice
That's me, and I'm always one TH-cam video ahead of you
can't explain how helpful these tips are, please keep doing this.
Amazing my man! Great tips and incredible production quality!
Appreciate it!
Brief and precise video with really helpful tips. 🎉🎉🎉
Glad you think so!
Long Bridges cause more instability in terms of accuracy. Use with caution and remember to keep your stroking arm as still and straight as possible when playing any shot.
Only play safety rail shots if you're truly unsure of whether you can make the shot, and don't overrun the cueball. You will always miss the shots you don't try to take, so if it's a high stakes situation and you think you have a chance of making the shot, go for it, but play the cueball long if you miss, at least make it difficult for the opponent to sink their next ball, whether another contact ball or the 8.
In terms of bridge length you should always check your line of aim and not only rely on the shot angle. Check angle from the contact ball to the pocket, the cue ball to the contact ball, and of course, from the cue tip to the cueball. Because there are a number of aiming systems available you should take bridge length compensation for field of vision with a pinch of salt.
Position is critical when it comes to pool, you are able to play any spin on most shots theoretically by adjusting for throw, drag and swerve. Don't only rely on making the ball to continue moving forward, you must utilise spin to position for your next shot.
With shots arching over a ball you want to also be sure to hit towards the center line of the cueball as much as possible. The cue is pointing into the bottom of the cue ball, which means any type of side spin will induce massé spin. As said, you must keep your stroking arm steady and your bridging hand as still as possible.
Finally, when you are playing a draw from close, be careful not to elevate too much or you'll lose your draw, and not to strike too straight below center, as you might accidentally cause the cueball to jump.
until next time.
awesome
Nice
Holly..... Once again you made something different! Sooo simple but sooo enjoyable :) You have very nice english pronunciation that I always wanted to have! I struggle with this all the time especially because I speak polish everyday :)
Thanks, bro! You're videos are great. Probably the best pool instructional channel right now!
@@PoolProblems wow!!! I didn't expect so great opinion. Thank you so much!
Thanks for your videos!
Could you make one focusing on the stance? Where to place your feet, how low to go, how to make a bridge (including over another ball), bridge distance from cue ball, closing one eye etc.
If anyone knows any good videos covering this please link me 🙂
I think tor lowrys pool secrets cover this very well!
Need more video
keep up the good work .... thess tips are very useful
Glad you liked them!
waiting for the next video!! love watching these super beneficial
Hope the algorithm gods bless your channel!
Thanks for the prayer 🙏🏼
It is blessed, one of his video reached 300k views, the algo sent me there :D
@@ztokkiz keep commenting, boys. You have more power than you think! Hope you're watching and enjoying all the videos 🥰
@@PoolProblems Oh I also gave u a sub and a like, u deserve that haha 😄
@@ztokkiz Thanks buddy!
Thanks for a very helpfull teaching !!!
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for the comment, buddy!
what you say is true especially the bridge... you need to have a longer bridge because the Q will help you aim better and make a better shot judgement BUT, everyone can look great on a table with pockets the size of buckets, everything goes in
I don't know what you're implying with your last point, but this video was shot on a diamond with 4 inch pockets and a pretty worn cloth.
@@PoolProblems im saying that the traditional pool club tables pockets are way too big, even the workd championship ones are super large, its not hard to look like a world champ in those
Love from vietnam
Thanks for your content it's help me a lot
Please make more videos
❤
I love your videos because i love the way you teach and i can easily understand them i hope u make more videos so i can improve in pool/billiards
good tips!
Good one! Subed
Glad you liked it, buddy!
Great video!
Thanks, I appreciate that!
nice 👌🏽
1:09 why ?
I've been doing this for some time now. It works. Would like to add that power shots do not work for me, so I concentrate on shooting softer and using proper English to get shapes for my next shot. Again, power shots are a ball out of control. Just saying
Thanks😊
These are good, and your editing is getting really slick btw. I dog the long thin cut all the time, and my eyes want to undercut it every time, so there's no safe miss. If I aim to deliberately overcut, I just overcut. So I will try a longer bridge.
PS: even though you're just doing it for the video and not in any serious way, and even though I did it a million times myself, you might want to resist tossing the cue onto the table. I used to think "well no possibility it hurts anything, not this very light toss from a very short distance"... but then one day the cue slid forward, hit the underside of the cushion, and that sent the tip downward and caused a small hole in the cloth. So I just don't do it anymore, as tempting as it is.
Thanks, buddy! Try aiming a tad lower on the cue ball also. I wanted to mention that in this video, but didn't fit the structure. I find that I get to lower my head even more, and that it helps the alignment. Plus, I'll strike more level, taking away the swerve.
The cue tossing - noted. Haha! It was a moment of improv, and it definitely hurt my pool soul, but that's just the things you do for fame :P
Very nice video
Thank you very much!
My biggest problem is I always tend to use the wrong english...Thanks for the tips
Your grammar seems fine to me........*tumbleweed*
Yes👍🎱
con esto aprendo a jugar billar
I already do all.
My first guitar was an ibanez
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Can you do a video showing some of the tricks ladyboys use in Thailand?
sv bro
Fuck
skibidi