Love the emphasis on timing and stroke in regards to following through, so much misinformation out there with people saying following through gives more spin because the tip is in contact with the cue ball for longer, which is just not true. I had never thought about the idea that not following through means you decelerated before the cue ball, but that makes a ton of sense! Great vid
@brianball200219 сағат бұрын
Stevie Wonder could pot balls in these huge pockets!! Try it on a snooker table then I would be impressed.
@ALEXANDERCRETA119 сағат бұрын
Nice lessons thanks
@charliegriffin490821 сағат бұрын
Superb skills
@kisha651721 сағат бұрын
Fantastic 🎉
@mikemelara959122 сағат бұрын
So it’s really not as hard as it seems at first glance. The only thing I can say is just go and try it. You’d be surprised how well your focus factor kicks in and how much more confident you feel once you walk away from the table each time you try. It took me a little over 42 minutes the last time I did this.
@davidcampbell74923 сағат бұрын
Great stuff brother. We appreciate you! That 49 ball runout (no rail / no bump) you did recently was inspiring… and also a reminder of how much work I have to do. Thanks for the lesson
@HansDelbruck53Күн бұрын
Aarts even beat Efren Reyes, so you were up against stiff competition. I believe you'll do better next time.
@DeepaSaraf-bu7gmКүн бұрын
How to hold stick
@DonWillis607Күн бұрын
Well, I'm glad someone else can do it too.
@anthonybarr6219Күн бұрын
24:40 are we gonna pretend that ball didn’t touch the rail?😂 great shooting though
@SharivariКүн бұрын
@@anthonybarr6219 Thanks! Just the cue ball is not allowed to touch the rails (01:07)
@davekat4680Күн бұрын
Always top info / thought tips. Thx Shavari 👍
@akikemppinen7078Күн бұрын
congratulations!
@ThabangBosakaКүн бұрын
❤
@jackandsally2239Күн бұрын
Good to know thank you☆
@ajschroetlin2196Күн бұрын
Acceleration is SO important to shot making.
@DavidDsvidsonКүн бұрын
This guy is a beast
@t_ohercyКүн бұрын
It makes me happy to see how much the channel has grown. You deserve the success. As always great content. You have helped me improve a lot since I started watching your channel.
@louflight2834Күн бұрын
Took me half the video to realise he was saying REDS instead of RATS😅😅
@nikinovskiКүн бұрын
The second ball already hits the rail, a corner of the rail before getting in.
@nikinovskiКүн бұрын
also 7:04
@nikinovskiКүн бұрын
9:45 may count but it's very minimal
@nikinovskiКүн бұрын
this one is very clear 15:02
@nikinovskiКүн бұрын
rail on 21:40 with black
@nikinovskiКүн бұрын
26:13 might be rail hit, but barely
@NICEFINENEWROBOTКүн бұрын
That was swell !
@craigsherwood3824Күн бұрын
Was doing this beautifully yesterday and owned the table. Today, not so much and thanks to this vid, I know why. I knew something was off, but I couldn't put a finger on it but now I can. Great job as always 🎱👍🏻👍🏻
@trailerwookieКүн бұрын
When you decelerate too quickly, you often do it by tightening your grip in your back hand. This will cause the cue tip to wobble slightly and sometimes dip, and that causes you to miss because you didn't hit the cue ball where you were aiming.
@codyhutsonКүн бұрын
Incredible information! This has been one of my mental queues lately. You explained it very well and easily! I appreciate you sharing!
@IMRAN-bt4spКүн бұрын
You're a legend of note....
@zekragash4294Күн бұрын
Sacrifice distance for angle.
@bertinlosier7865Күн бұрын
I agree with all of this ... when I focus on follow thru I make more balls. I want to know why. I was never satisfied with most of the explanations out there. Follow thru prevents deceleration they say. So what? If the cue is decelerating at impact, AND travelling in the right direction (straight) the shot should not suffer from it. (well, unless back or top spin was an important part of the shot). What's the problem? What could deceleration have to do with a cue stick deviation? Perhaps (I think) ... In order for the cue to decelerate before impact, something has to apply a counter force to it ... and this force can either be the friction in our arm muscles (quite a bit of it actually), or an actual activation of muscles that want to "stop" the cue. In either case the potential for cue stick deviation is real. Imagine a very slow shot that's executed with a long back stroke. I can imagine the long excruciating trip from the back of the stroke all the way to the cue ball at a slow speed along with all the interference by the muscles in the straight delivery of the cue. (I can actually visualize the tip of the cue wobbling left to right on it's way to the cue ball as I type this). Having the thought of follow thru in our mind during the shot minimizes the odds that we will (our muscles) get in the way of the cue stick. This needs to be practiced until ingrained in our sub conscious ... and we won't need to "think" about it anymore.
@PoolTips101Күн бұрын
These videos are so well put together
@galanfink4028Күн бұрын
I think this is my problem when shooting (other than speed/ball control after the shot). THANK YOU.
@raihanaufallКүн бұрын
Meanwhile SVB creating his own unique stroke with small follow through and still got same result as long good timing follow through
@SharivariКүн бұрын
@@raihanaufall Timing is key, yes.
@BROU-bb2ucКүн бұрын
I lived this Wednesday night 😞
@killjoy377Күн бұрын
Congratulations on completing that insane drill! We all know how much control and precision you had to have to be able to do that.
@thesafezone38332 күн бұрын
99% of shots can be hit at a fair speed. So I've always tried to remember that a miss is a miss, hitting softly or with a good stroke. Hit every ball with confidence and a good stroke and give yourself the best chance to make it. As always, great stuff from Shavari.
@2kingrich2 күн бұрын
There are times that a 'drag' shot is in order too.
@thesafezone3833Күн бұрын
True, but the 'drag' shot is still a good stroke with follow through, just not hit firm enough for the draw to reach the object ball.
@drillguy300Күн бұрын
In a drag shot the cue ball decelerates, not the cue.
@2kingrichКүн бұрын
@@thesafezone3833 I realized that after my post. Brain fade. lol
@ytdgreat2 күн бұрын
24:42 hit the rail😪 26:46 hit the rail..😱😱😭😭😭
@PapaHands2 күн бұрын
Why zero pre stroke? And, what is your aiming technique?
@naonao762 күн бұрын
🎱
@SharivariКүн бұрын
@@naonao76 🎱👊
@Erkkremlinklum2 күн бұрын
What drives me nuts is no matter how many hundreds of hours I try this, My best game is not having a lose grip, all four fings wrapped around cue and doing short punchy strokes like Shaw. And I never used to shoot this way but I can do everything wrong. Could be a death grip, tensing up, not following through and im much more accurate and get great cue ball action. But hey if it works for Jayson I guess I shouldn’t shy away from it and just do my best to smooth it out
@bwhite4292 күн бұрын
Great content as usual Sharivari. Getting ready to drive to Derby, maybe see you again.
@EvilleMusic2 күн бұрын
Will you be at the Derby City Classic next week?🎱
@SharivariКүн бұрын
Yes, I am already there.
@user-ce7dv2ti5w2 күн бұрын
Such amazing touch. I really appreciated the commentary also
@calebstaskunas20772 күн бұрын
24:40 you hit a rail but almost decent other than that
@paulwhite92752 күн бұрын
Nice shooting
@shotbboy2 күн бұрын
Can't imagine how many retakes, there's just zero margin for error in this game of micro millimeters. Amazing, amazing job 👏👏
@lawrencebrumwell2 күн бұрын
This is a great effort at explaining this. I've been really working hard to just get center ball control down and starting to feel like I could add this. In practice, it's a huge fail rate but this helps narrow it down. It's simple to some but not so simple when you have no volume and mental and muscle memory. Thanks.
@JeffreyBrewster-xs2he2 күн бұрын
I assume this mf plays for charity with all the money he's making off gd ads. Unreal
@thebriant.mcdaniel30642 күн бұрын
Excellent showing really, you should be very proud of that play.