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Learn to Jump Balls (1 of 2) - Pool / Billiards

BCA Master Billiards Instructor Tom Simpson gives a brief demo of standard "dart method" ball-jumping technique for short & high jumps. Video #2 (also on YouTube) shows you how to use the "pendulum...  
 
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BilliardInstructor (8 months ago) Show Hide
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I can't disagree with your comments. However, we have what we have, which is rule sets and venues that allow specialized equipment & techniques, within some limits. You'd be stupid not to learn jumping AND to have the easy to use equipment. You don't have to "believe in it" or agree that it should be allowed. If it's allowed, you'd better be prepared to take advantage of the way it is. Your opponents certainly will.

You don't want show up at a gunfight with a knife.
BrianMichaelEvans (8 months ago) Show Hide
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Well said my friend.

Whether you agree or disagree with what the rules and stipulations are if you go to places to play COMPETITIVLY . . . bring the gear needed to out perform your oponent!
rackrunner99 (1 month ago) Show Hide
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I think jump cues have raised the standards for safety play. When I played APA jumping was uncommon because jump cues werent allowed. So merely getting behind a ball was enough. Now I play BCA and they are. So Ive had to learn to play more of a "lock up" type safe.
Besides jumping isnt always the result of a good safe or bad position play. What about when youre playing that lucky scmuck who gets an uninteded safe roll every time he misses? Is it fair that Im then screwed as a result of rolls?
zzzfore (8 months ago) Show Hide
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I'd like to see the jump cues outlawed. You'd get to break with one cue and shoot with the other. No break downs and no substitutions when you are shooting so if you can jump a ball with your regular cue, fine and dandy. I appreciate the skill to jump balls when done with the regular cue but those ridiculous shorties take away from the game.
BilliardInstructor (8 months ago) Show Hide
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There are always edges to be gained through specialized skills and tweaked equipment. For example, players shooting with a Stinger "All-in-One" cue could be said to have an unfair advantage in venues where "jump cues" are not allowed, since that cue is engineered to work well for both play and break/jump, even without breaking it down. If my full-length playing cue jumps better than yours, is that fair? People will always push to the edge of what can be done within the equipment specs.
zzzfore (8 months ago) Show Hide
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Players will shoot with the cue that plays the best for them all around. They will not play with a stinger or anything else unless it's at least 99.99999% as good (to them) as their favorite cue. But for pros, it's moot because they will play with their sponsor's cue--even if it's god awful. For example: Strickland played with cuetec for over a decade. Now he says it ruined his game. Pros can play great pool with anything though. Efren and his $13 cue did pretty well for many years.
BilliardInstructor (8 months ago) Show Hide
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Don't assume pros are playing with "off the rack" sponsor products. Not even close.
zzzfore (8 months ago) Show Hide
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I can't see my comments here, only your answers, so it's hard to respond. My main point still holds whether most pros play with sponsor's cues or not (I think they do--for example, many unknowns in my area have informal agreements with local cue makers to play with their cues). But my point is, good players can adjust to any decent cue so if it is in their financial interest, they will play with pretty much whatever is given to them.
BilliardInstructor (9 months ago) Show Hide
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Your points are valid. However, since jumping & jump cues are legal in most venues, if you don't have the skills & equipment, you are putting yourself at a disadvantage.

Where do we draw the line? What's a jump? The CB jumps a little on every shot. If you put a coin on the table a few inches in front of the CB, and hit straight at it with a normal flat stroke, the CB jumps over the coin. If I elevate and make the CB come up a half-inch to clear the edge of an obstructing ball, is that a jump?
lemonite1 (9 months ago) Show Hide
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good point..... and if masse is legal, who's to say that jumping shouldn't be allowed. I guess you're right.

I still feel it takes much of the strategy away from the game. For nine ball, getting in and out of safety is tough, especially at tournament level. Remember when the games were just Billiards, Snooker and Straight? Nine ball ruined a lot....

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