This is a great interview. Tyler gives a lot of advice from fundamentals to the mental aspect of pull. Tyler seems like a genuine nice guy. Great interview.
Another great interview Joey. Keep them coming if you can .I know it's a lot of work. Hopefully this and everything else you do in your life will turn out the way you want. You seem like a really intelligent guy with goals that I'm sure you will meet!
Man, you gotta ask him what DVD his parents got him! Great podcast though. Thanks for doing it. Nice to have pool related stuff to listen to while in the car.
"No player in the country that's hit more balls than he has in the last 10 years" But he just talked about how Shane worked on his break for 2 hours straight when the room was empty and anytime there is an open table at a tournament Shane is hitting balls. Like he said though, it would be cool to have that stat.
Tyler definitely practices a lot. We talked about that when I asked him if he was surprised to be picked so he was probably thinking “out of everyone left to pick, nobody has hit more balls” and he may be right since Shane was already selected.
@@DogginIt at the recent BCA national tourney in Vegas, I walked down at 6 am to the tournament room on the first day of the entire event. Tyler was already at the big tables hitting balls when I got there.
@@CMarshallD Set an object ball on the second diamond to the right of the the rack spot (along the footstring) about half a ball off the rail. Make a line from the object to the center of the headstring. Place the cueball a foot away from the object ball on that line. Use low-right english (you may need more draw than right or vice versa) to pocket the ball as soft as you can in the corner pocket. Next step is to shoot the same shot and bring the ball back to the center of the headstring without hitting the head rail. After you've gotten a feel for this shot, move the cue ball to the center of the headstring and repeat the shot. Come back and reply with your thoughts/questions.
A biomechanical observation for Tyler. One thing that just about all of say the top 100 snooker pros have/do is a Pause on their final fans, and they deliver the shot from that Pause n the back swing! Buddy Hall has one! Tyler has built one into his game! but very few of the USA pro do... why did you go down that path Tyler? regards, David
I’ve seen that technique trained by a couple instructors. I’ve tried to use it myself but it gets me into a bad habit of elevating my back hand slightly. I should work on it more!
@@DogginIt for what it's worth, it's now standard coaching practice in places like China, which is where there is a massive amount of talent to be seen in so many great young players... More and more of the EU Pro's are building it into their games... Niels Feijen leading the way with that sort of thing. re the Pause.. I like to frame it around 'you need to *build it* into your game'...
This is a great interview. Tyler gives a lot of advice from fundamentals to the mental aspect of pull. Tyler seems like a genuine nice guy. Great interview.
Another great interview Joey. Keep them coming if you can .I know it's a lot of work. Hopefully this and everything else you do in your life will turn out the way you want. You seem like a really intelligent guy with goals that I'm sure you will meet!
Thank you Lester. I appreciate the kind words!
Thank you for the interview with Tyler. Especially liked the question about the turning point on when he knew he could compete at a pro-level.
I’m always curious about that for each player. Thanks for watching!
Thank you for these videos. Very interesting and informative. Great questions asked as well. Keep up the great work. 👍
Awesome interview.thank you guys.
Thank you for tuning in!
Good stuff! I look forward to reading Bounce(Matthew Syed).
Thanks Eric!
Interview Warren Kiamco 😊
Man, you gotta ask him what DVD his parents got him! Great podcast though. Thanks for doing it. Nice to have pool related stuff to listen to while in the car.
Why didn’t I ask that!?!! I’ll message him. Thanks for tuning in.
Tyler says, “Go to TH-cam and type in Robert Byrnes. They will be there.” Those were the lessons he used growing up.
Very informative. Thanks for your efforts
You’re welcome. More to come!!!
Great job! Keep it up
Thanks David. More on the way!
"No player in the country that's hit more balls than he has in the last 10 years"
But he just talked about how Shane worked on his break for 2 hours straight when the room was empty and anytime there is an open table at a tournament Shane is hitting balls. Like he said though, it would be cool to have that stat.
Tyler definitely practices a lot. We talked about that when I asked him if he was surprised to be picked so he was probably thinking “out of everyone left to pick, nobody has hit more balls” and he may be right since Shane was already selected.
@@DogginIt at the recent BCA national tourney in Vegas, I walked down at 6 am to the tournament room on the first day of the entire event. Tyler was already at the big tables hitting balls when I got there.
Thanks!
You’re welcome!
I remember taking a. Greyhound bus to train with Mark Wilson and Nick Varner. He is right. You need to seek it out.
Speed vs Spin...game changer!
Contrary to what I’ve told people for years but it makes so much sense.
Hiya, do you have something where I can look into this more? Perhaps some sort of drill?
@@CMarshallD Set an object ball on the second diamond to the right of the the rack spot (along the footstring) about half a ball off the rail. Make a line from the object to the center of the headstring. Place the cueball a foot away from the object ball on that line. Use low-right english (you may need more draw than right or vice versa) to pocket the ball as soft as you can in the corner pocket. Next step is to shoot the same shot and bring the ball back to the center of the headstring without hitting the head rail. After you've gotten a feel for this shot, move the cue ball to the center of the headstring and repeat the shot. Come back and reply with your thoughts/questions.
Cory Siler- Thanks! We have 35 mutual friends on Facebook I added you.
@@CMarshallD connected! Thanks again for watching!
A biomechanical observation for Tyler. One thing that just about all of say the top 100 snooker pros have/do is a Pause on their final fans, and they deliver the shot from that Pause n the back swing! Buddy Hall has one! Tyler has built one into his game! but very few of the USA pro do... why did you go down that path Tyler? regards, David
I’ve seen that technique trained by a couple instructors. I’ve tried to use it myself but it gets me into a bad habit of elevating my back hand slightly. I should work on it more!
@@DogginIt for what it's worth, it's now standard coaching practice in places like China, which is where there is a massive amount of talent to be seen in so many great young players... More and more of the EU Pro's are building it into their games... Niels Feijen leading the way with that sort of thing. re the Pause.. I like to frame it around 'you need to *build it* into your game'...
@@debbiedavid4725 good to know. Thank you.
@@DogginIt Mark Wilson is teaching the pause before final delivery as well.
Interesting foreshadowing about the “you heard it here first - in 4-5 years pool tournaments will be 100,000 and up”. And look what’s happening now
32:09 😂😂😂
someone to interview! his name cam up, Buddy Hall
Good suggestion!
Ask him about the 7-9 combo “miss”
10ball Break @ 14min mark
too much class for matchroom! f'em ✊😌
I wake up in Banks
Bank on brother.