That was a pretty impressive run. Good break out...good focus...left a little out of shape on a few shots but overall impressive. On the shot getting shape on the second to last ball, he should have taken the ball off of the rail giving an easy angle.
@lphooper03 He ( i ) was trying to get off that rail with a high-right english but because my angle was so flat on the 13-ball, the cue ball caught he pocket-point rather than the flat of the rail... hence the odd shape on the 14
I thought up a similar game, "Rotate 8", where each person must hit their stripes or solids lowest to highest as they play 8 ball. BCA rules. Your "8-ROT" game can be played solo for training, but mine can involve some safety strategy.
@rjoI created this game to be a brutal form of practice. A fairly accomplished local player (120+ usppa, strong APA 9, BCA Master... not bragging at all just giving an idea of how I play in terms hopefully most people can relate to), I was looking for something more cerebral than 9-ball/10-ball, but not as hard as 15-ball rotation. In my opinion rotation is too difficult to accurately gauge a players ability consistently in a 'run out or bust' format, even among pros. Simply too much traffic
A 9 or 10-ball ghost is too easy for a top tier (not me) player, all the scores would be right at the top edge of what's possible. I dislike safety play because I feel like it keeps top talents from going for truly creative or difficult shots that land outside of 'the % play'. Why handcuff the worlds best players? I was well out of line on the 11, and playing a straight rotation game it would've been smarter to play a basic safe, send the 11 back up table and roll behind the 12.
But seriously, where is the fun in that as a spectator? It's almost like being bailed out for a lackluster position play. Don't duck because of a cluster 2 balls ahead that looks 40% as it lays, but jumps to 70% if you get ball in hand. That's boring! Why handcuff the worlds best players by rewarding % play, shoot the tough shots, play the multi-rail breakouts, carom object balls off others because they lay naturally. The best pool to watch is Efren winning a landslide match...
His shot selection goes out the window and you get to see what a unhindered pool genius is capable of. Challenge players to blow our freakin' minds! Back to the game at hand... 8-rot probably lands in a difficultly of 11-12 ball rotation difficulty realm. I have a spreadsheet of 200+ full 10-rack sessions and my average is right around 7 points, with a high of 13 (only played on tight tables), and even two flat 0's. The vast majority of my scores land right in the 6-8 area.
I've played head to head against people, alternating racks, and its interesting to observe how different people play when they have to run out. It really is a different mindset. I enjoy that mentality, and the torture that follows, most players get frustrated and refuse to play. I imagine though that top players would average something like 13-14, with an occasional 18,19 and possibly one day I'll see a 20.
That would be an absolute joy to watch, inevitably pulling off some truly creative shots we'd otherwise never see in a competitive format, and probably tossing up a near miracle or two along the way. Sorry, I had to pick a comment to reply to a hundred times to speak my mind, nothing personal, but I chose yours. Thanks!
That was a pretty impressive run. Good break out...good focus...left a little out of shape on a few shots but overall impressive. On the shot getting shape on the second to last ball, he should have taken the ball off of the rail giving an easy angle.
lphooper03 5 months ago
@lphooper03 He ( i ) was trying to get off that rail with a high-right english but because my angle was so flat on the 13-ball, the cue ball caught he pocket-point rather than the flat of the rail... hence the odd shape on the 14
rojogrande82 4 months ago
I thought up a similar game, "Rotate 8", where each person must hit their stripes or solids lowest to highest as they play 8 ball. BCA rules. Your "8-ROT" game can be played solo for training, but mine can involve some safety strategy.
rjohnson8ball 2 years ago
@rjoI created this game to be a brutal form of practice. A fairly accomplished local player (120+ usppa, strong APA 9, BCA Master... not bragging at all just giving an idea of how I play in terms hopefully most people can relate to), I was looking for something more cerebral than 9-ball/10-ball, but not as hard as 15-ball rotation. In my opinion rotation is too difficult to accurately gauge a players ability consistently in a 'run out or bust' format, even among pros. Simply too much traffic
rojogrande82 4 months ago
A 9 or 10-ball ghost is too easy for a top tier (not me) player, all the scores would be right at the top edge of what's possible. I dislike safety play because I feel like it keeps top talents from going for truly creative or difficult shots that land outside of 'the % play'. Why handcuff the worlds best players? I was well out of line on the 11, and playing a straight rotation game it would've been smarter to play a basic safe, send the 11 back up table and roll behind the 12.
rojogrande82 4 months ago
But seriously, where is the fun in that as a spectator? It's almost like being bailed out for a lackluster position play. Don't duck because of a cluster 2 balls ahead that looks 40% as it lays, but jumps to 70% if you get ball in hand. That's boring! Why handcuff the worlds best players by rewarding % play, shoot the tough shots, play the multi-rail breakouts, carom object balls off others because they lay naturally. The best pool to watch is Efren winning a landslide match...
rojogrande82 4 months ago
His shot selection goes out the window and you get to see what a unhindered pool genius is capable of. Challenge players to blow our freakin' minds! Back to the game at hand... 8-rot probably lands in a difficultly of 11-12 ball rotation difficulty realm. I have a spreadsheet of 200+ full 10-rack sessions and my average is right around 7 points, with a high of 13 (only played on tight tables), and even two flat 0's. The vast majority of my scores land right in the 6-8 area.
rojogrande82 4 months ago
I've played head to head against people, alternating racks, and its interesting to observe how different people play when they have to run out. It really is a different mindset. I enjoy that mentality, and the torture that follows, most players get frustrated and refuse to play. I imagine though that top players would average something like 13-14, with an occasional 18,19 and possibly one day I'll see a 20.
rojogrande82 4 months ago
That would be an absolute joy to watch, inevitably pulling off some truly creative shots we'd otherwise never see in a competitive format, and probably tossing up a near miracle or two along the way. Sorry, I had to pick a comment to reply to a hundred times to speak my mind, nothing personal, but I chose yours. Thanks!
rojogrande82 4 months ago
the best
djazdodi 2 years ago
sure it's mike stern. one of the best ever
bygota 3 years ago
This is 9ft table?
krymexus112 3 years ago
Yes, it's a 9-foot table with tight pockets (triple-shimmed).
-- peer
PeerLanda 3 years ago
Peer, another cool vid featuring "The Boy". Is that a Mike Stern tune or maybe John Schofield?
6shamus5 3 years ago
It's Mike Stern -- the most underrated guitarist ever.
-- peer
PeerLanda 3 years ago
You mean Mike "10 inches" Stern?
cappspw 2 years ago