Hey Josh I agree with you on the follow through with your stick but can cause the cue ball to comeback and hit your cue resulting in a foul hit?
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Great question! I taught a friend of mine how to draw and he had the same question. The cool thing is, I recorded it. Check out this video - kzbin.infoBtt-NVobEjM?si=YnbEb3rmmweEf4MZ
@silvercue96253 ай бұрын
I love your demeanor, and your voice. They seem to be perfect for giving pool instruction via video. I don’t teach follow through, I teach smooth acceleration of the tip through the cue ball contact point. Seems like that is the new trend now and I’ve been teaching it since the 70s
@richardjones90072 ай бұрын
That would be true only if you hit the ball below center, creating a draw shot.
@earlschandelmeier7512 ай бұрын
@@silvercue9625 The best follow through drill I've ever seen or tried is probably the most fun. Just shoot long straight shots with the cue ball a few fee from the object ball. Practice hitting top center of the cue so that you follow the object ball into the pocket for a scratch. As you get better change the distance and angle of the object ball and shot. It's fun because you can count how many shots you make and see the result of follow through as the cue ball accelerates forward after contact. It took maybe 500 balls for me to completely change my stroke. Abought 2 easy nights of practice. Now before any night of play I hit 2 or 3 racks this way just to groove my stroke before I warm up.
@johnettebeaver1991Ай бұрын
Open bridge, pull your index finger back tight against your thumb but keeping it straight and hold it tight like your holding onto a rope that your life depends on. 41 years of playing pool and still learning new things. Agree with you except for the follow through on a shot that close using draw. I know you shot the cue just off center and the cue pulled back and right. I was taught by Al Kokalas years ago how to shoot moving the cue ball as little as possible. He taught me how to hit my object ball hit a rail and literally rock the cue ball off the rail less than an hairs width away from the rail to leave the opponent a tough shot if we didn’t have a good shot for him to continue with our next shot. I miss him, he’s been gone a long time, Jeff Dovinsky taught me side pocket shots. The first time I met Jeff at Sunshine Liquors on Okeechobee Rd in Ft Pierce, He said women aren’t allowed to play pool…come here let me show you something and I still play at 68 and I am still learning and improving my game. Al and I shot Scotch Mixed Doubles and he wanted to back me to go pro but I had young children and I will be in church on Sunday of at all possible not shooting pool.
@jimmiedisherjr15364 ай бұрын
From someone who's been playing pool about 40 years, this is some excellent advice. Just getting back in to pool, I've noticed myself doing most of these things. Thanks for your effort.
@kennethsilvestri41614 ай бұрын
Good job👍
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Thank you! So glad that you're getting back into the game
@toddaulner53933 ай бұрын
I went to teach a very green player and I had trouble as he is 7 inches shorter than me and I shoot differently. I thought him some stuff but he is from Japan and maybe only played a couple times in his life.
@Dimlhugion2 ай бұрын
Solid advice right here from this guy. Been shooting for 20 years, half of that in an in-house league at my local pool hall. I've seen it all there, from rack-runners to first-timers and EVERYONE falls prey to this stuff. The difference is in knowledge: the people running racks KNOW what they're "supposed" to do, even if they sometimes forget it or aren't paying attention to it in the moment. But amateurs like me? Lots of us have never been taught what we're supposed to do in the first place! If I could give this vid more than one like, I would.
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
@@Dimlhugion thank you!!
@liberty93482 ай бұрын
All are correct. Unstable bridge, not following through, and popping up all ADD variables to the stroke mechanism. Removing all of these WILL make your stroke mechanism more accurate than it was. Understand that it will not give you a 100% perfect stroke, but it will 100% make your stroke more accurate than it was. Good tips. Good video. Short, clear, and concise.
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
Well said! Thanks for the comment!
@ChuckK-j1k27 күн бұрын
You're absolutely right, 1. Have a good comfortable steady stance like a statue. 2. A good strong bridge that even an earthquake isn't going to make it fall, lol, it shouldn't move. 3. Your stroke is what makes the shot, straight and true and follow through. And above all relax smile and have fun...
@davelariviere4 ай бұрын
About the moving and jumping up on the shot. I was once told to shoot with my ears! What he meant was do the shot and wait until you hear the object ball fall before you move. "Sounds" kind of odd but it will keep you down on the shot!
@rdskew4 ай бұрын
While this technique 'sounds' like it could help, there are a significant amount of shots that a dropped ball isn't the desired outcome...~~Just me, RD
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
"sounds" like pretty okay advice (i see what you did there)! LOL... good stuff, Dave!
@joshmiller81924 ай бұрын
I was taught somewhere along my hustling and getting hustled journey of pool, to stay down till you see the ball go in the pocket. When I’ve made tough shots it really works often! I was battling an experienced one pocket player this week and made a straight back bank on my pocket left handed! I’m naturally right, but not staying down is the main flaw I see with players.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@joshmiller8192 100%... that and bridge!
@BlurryZurry3 ай бұрын
I watch every shot go to the pocket when I can. I can see where my shots go down to the centimeter. It really helps
@seanh657810 күн бұрын
Nicely stated! And I agree. I've been shooting for 30 years, and shooting amateur league for 19. I'm still trying to make follow through a muscle memory response. I like the drill! I have tried others with little success. Thanks!
@markfrankinstien4165Күн бұрын
Man you're giving great info. Smart and easy to listen to and very nice and positive. You are a good teacher
@Amateur_Pool6 сағат бұрын
Thanks, Mark!
@robertdenson33753 ай бұрын
100 ball runner here... You are spot on with your advice .Great job. Impressive.
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
@@robertdenson3375 100 ball run is impressive! Great job. Thanks for the support!
@robby18164 ай бұрын
5:40 Yep. I try to launch the cue at the object ball. This takes care of the follow through and the anticipated cueball contact.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
That works for me also!
@CMc-v7zАй бұрын
Snooker player here and the most important aspects of all cue sports is to the have a loose grip and really play through the cue ball, don't move on your shot at all always keeping your head still. When you make a decision about where you are hitting the white, come down to that aiming point straight, don't move the cue left or right once you are down on the shot.
@86BusinessSolutions11 күн бұрын
Well presented...thank you for sharing!!!
@MikeyD86323 ай бұрын
Your absolutely right on. No matter how much progress I make these bad habits make there way back in. When I'm tiered they usually come back. Developing a preshot routine is a must to be consistent. I'm a year in and still struggling to maintain one. It's the simple things that kill our game
@jasonjohnson51544 ай бұрын
I tell players that I help to stay down until they either make or miss the shot. Goes for safeties as well you either make the safety or you miss it. If you have ever shot a rifle or pistol you stay absolutely still during the shot. Your forearm is the trigger finger so just focus on the contact point and a smooth transition. Your game is getting stronger as well! Keep up the good work!
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@edwardwallace16333 ай бұрын
Great video I do all three Being from Taylor Michigan and growing up with a pool table but no instructions Joined a league and my pool journey has begun!
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
@edwardwallace1633 thanks, Ed! Good luck in league.. maybe we'll run into each other. I play down river every now and then
@huntress-ro5jl10 күн бұрын
The stance one helped me BIG time. I'm still working on the other two. Thanks for the tips!
@Amateur_Pool10 күн бұрын
@@huntress-ro5jl glad it helped! Thanks for watching
@ShellyWright-yx6sx23 күн бұрын
Good advice, bound to improve some games. If I might throw a couple thoughts in, in no way am I trying to advise (perhaps maybe 6:48 a thought).I believe the perfect stroke is the one that's most comfortable to you that gives you your best outcomes the cue ball only knows where it's hit,in which direction its hit, and how hard it's hit.A good bridge will definitely help with that. The whole game boils down to one thing control the cue ball if you control the cue ball you control the table.A wise old man once told me there's three things you need to be decent at this game you need great eyesight solid nerves and a little bit of luck.
@reallife30153 ай бұрын
Very well documented. Learnt the 3 big mistakes every one makes . Presenter is very good in simplifying which makes it easier to understand 👍👍👍
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@WiredNow4 ай бұрын
Thanks, Josh. These are simple mistakes I make. Your tips will make my game today unbeatable! 😁 Saying "stay still" to myself will help a lot. 😁 😁 I would really appreciate many more tips like this. 😁 😁 😁
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
You got it, my man! I'll try to put out more videos like this in the future
@samuelpoleson3 ай бұрын
I can see your a good shooter. You have these three correct, because I am still making these same mistakes, after 50 years of playing Billards. Keep up the good teachings. Sam
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
@@samuelpoleson thanks, Sam! Also, just because I know these doesn't mean I always apply them. I'm an amature and still learning and honing my skills also! I appreciate you watching!
@pete-dog3 ай бұрын
Great video and all valid points. To review - stable bridge, still body and head, follow thru stroke. So here's the thing - you can't think about all of those while you're shooting and still make a shot. Too much clutter in the mind. Here's a better approach. Focus on what TO do rather than what NOT to do. Imagine your cue is hanging on a long thin fragile wire that's stretched across the room. The wire runs thru the center of your tip and thru the cue and out the center of the rubber bumper. Make it a rule while you're shooting and immediately after your shot that the cue must not damage that fragile wire by moving off line. After that the only other thing is the follow thru. For that you imagine a spot past the cue ball where the cue will come to rest after the shot. So when you shoot you intend to literally toss the cue down the wire and the tip into a space that is beyond the cue ball. You need to visualize where the cue will finish and your stroke should be nothing more than going from point A to point B. How hard you toss is how hard you shoot. But your motion needs to be simple and pure. So if you focus on keeping your cue on line and finishing online and focus on throwing the cue tip to the point past the ball - all those other things like not moving and having a stable bridge automatically happen because you're focused on doing one thing as opposed to not doing three things. Add a loose grip to the mix and watch the magic happen. Resignation is also a big part of this mindset. Don't anticipate the hit and don't anticipate the object ball going into a pocket. You have to resign yourself to whatever happens after your stroke. After you stroke you need to become a spectator and just pay careful attention to what happens. But this is how you're supposed to cue a ball every time you shoot and for every type of shot.
@drewvonporte4 ай бұрын
This is a great starting point for starting to teach newer players man. I harp on these 3 exact things to my guys all the time!!!! Very cool to put it all together in a slick video. And props for showing the $hitty follow through when you were demonstrating a bridge, then coming back to show it when talking about follow-through!!!! 💯💯💯💯
@antoniog98144 ай бұрын
You noticed that too. I was going to call him out on it, but he covered it on the 2nd tip, 😂👍
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@drewvonporte i'd like to say it was on purpose, but it wasn't. I did notice it though, which is why I used it for the second example!
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@drewvonporte btw, I'm holding editing lessons for 10 million an hour... sign up please, lol
@drewvonporte4 ай бұрын
@@Amateur_Pool that wasn’t on purpose?? Even better of you to use it as an example 👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼 Wow that’s cheap! Where do I sign?? 🫠
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@drewvonporte lol... 🤣😂
@tomsorlie41974 ай бұрын
Very good post Josh! Coming back to basic fundamentals seems to be necessary at all levels as we progress. I asked a friend ( fargo 709 ) if he could give me one tip that might help my game. ( I'm fargo 540 ). He said make sure the bridge hand is solid. Press down on the table and stabilize the bridge. A pro in Vegas told me to follow through. ( I thought I was? ). I asked what's one thing pros do that amateurs don't. He said pros use the rails extensively. Sometimes 4 rails around to get the best shape.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
good stuff Tom! I'm just spreading what works for me, and what i've learned. It's nice to hear that pros have told you the same thing!
@allanfischer9417Ай бұрын
Good tips - I particularly like the putting weight on the left hand and staying down following the shot. The third tip reminds me of playing golf where you need to keep your head still until after the club strikes the ball. Maybe if you waited until you hear the cue ball strike the object ball before looking, it will help. Just a thought.
@jimmiedisherjr1536Ай бұрын
@@allanfischer9417 It must be why Earl wears a weight on his left forearm.
@garyprentiss6252Ай бұрын
HAHAHAAHA Yo Josh! I played today with some of the fellows. The follow through worked well but, I still felt better banking and won the first game with a three in the side. Game two a four rail. Finished with straight BLACK-NO-CREAM-NO SUGA hahahahaha show me more BIG DAWG!! GAP out, peace
@Amateur_PoolАй бұрын
@garyprentiss6252 nice work!
@billpii6314Ай бұрын
You will lose far more than you will win.
@katerinamafiosa4 ай бұрын
i write on my bridge hand "stay down" between my thumb & forefinger in red - Great video Josh!!
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
What a great idea!
@katerinamafiosa3 ай бұрын
@@Amateur_Pool thank you! i am in my 2nd year of the APA and i struggle!! :)
@kriswood13544 ай бұрын
It's like playing Whack-A-Mole at Chuck E Cheese when a room full of players keeps popping up as they shoot. Just hilarious sometimes. BUT we all started out with tons of bad habits! My habit is to stay down until all the balls on the table stop moving and the tip of my cue at the end of my stroke just touching the cloth. Its taken years and I still mess up. I work with several players on thier stroke and this video will be shared with them. Thanks for another great video Josh! See you in Orlando!
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Great stuff (staying down until the balls stop rolling). I appreciate you sharing the video (and watching it yourself as well)! Thank you!
@Modbossvideo3 ай бұрын
Hey Josh, I rarely comment and if I do I'm usually pretty snotty. But you nailed it. I went out and did the palm press and the robot arm and I noticed a difference right away. Thanks for the tip and good luck with your channel.
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
Thank you bro! I'm glad it helped you.
@thegodofpez4 ай бұрын
Really nicely explained. As an amateur, I tend to do all of these things. I’ve never heard of flat palming before and I’ve watched TONS of tutorials before. Subscribed! Thanks, brutha. 🫡
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@thegodofpez thanks for the sub! I appreciate it!
@chrisduncan1647Ай бұрын
Beginner just getting into shooting pool regularly rather than once every blue moon over the last 25 years. Appreciate the advice.
@Amateur_PoolАй бұрын
Love to hear this! Appreciate you watching the vid also!
@terellwalker23523 ай бұрын
Yes the follow through working on mine also.....I have all 3 problems but getting better thanks to watching your videos
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
@terellwalker2352 thanks, Terell!
@jasonmetz7428Ай бұрын
Thank you. I really appreciated you making this video.. All 3 of those are things ive been told about from better players and I work to improve on them still.
@Amateur_PoolАй бұрын
@@jasonmetz7428 🙌🙌
@garyprentiss6252Ай бұрын
BIG DAWG, This is GAP..... I like this video my man. I see these things all the time but never gave them any thought. That funky jab shot is something I do and hate it( cause I miss). But, if you would, my biggest problem is "THE STRAIGHT IN SHOT"!!! I can see a bank shot so much easier and I'll bank a possible straight in before I shoot the very easy straight in. Talk to me, PEACE
@Amateur_PoolАй бұрын
Thanks, bro! Appreciate the kind words. That straight shot can be a killer. It all boils down to a good, straight, stroke for those shots.
@raelynnclinard4 ай бұрын
i see a lot of players that are decent but have the flaw where they will aim center ball for every shot and then dip as they stroke to get draw, or drop their elbow/shoulder to add top. While it may work sometimes, it is definitely not reliable. They always complain that they didnt get any draw and only got a stop shot when trying to draw for position. it's hard to get them to believe their flaw in a lot of these cases, I'm going to have to start slow-mo recording their stroke to show them i guess... lol.. also, a lot of people just bridge too far away from the cue ball and wonder why their accuracy is inconsistent. It's like a good golf swing, really. Just repeat the same motions every time and youll be a good player! One thing you can do to help the movement issue is to just learn to not move after your stroke until the cue ball stops or the ball is pocketed, of course making sure to get out of the way if a ball is coming at you lol... Keep up the good content sir!
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Thanks, Rae! Good stuff
@antoniog98144 ай бұрын
Another way to practice your follow-through is to put a piece of tape or a rubber band on your shaft where your bridge hand should normally end up. On every shot, you should strive to reach that mark. One thing to note, the more practice one gets, the more comfortable on the table one becomes and the easier good habits come.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
That's a great tip! I've never heard that one before but I love it I'm going to use your tip and make a short/reel about it! This is a good one!
@veronicahawthorne34524 ай бұрын
Great video! New subbie! I see so many people make these mistakes. I even pop up from time to time if I’m unsure or uncomfortable with a shot, especially a hard, long shot. Otherwise I stay down until the ball reaches the pocket.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the sub! Much appreciated
@dwayneandrews205910 күн бұрын
Good tips. Wish I knew all this back in the 70's when my Dad taught me to play😮
@ghweldon118 күн бұрын
#1 was a great heads up for me. Thanks Mr. J.
@Amateur_Pool8 күн бұрын
Your most welcome!
@lucypoopies4 ай бұрын
Great advice to straighten your back leg to avoid "popping up" during your stroke. It most certainly is difficult to continue this bad habit when you take the "spring" in your knees out of the equation.
@dfynt1G4 ай бұрын
I just now realized when i use a closed bridge i am sometimes on the fingertips. Keep em coming
@Mr_Daze2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tips, are you keeping your eye on the object ball throughout the stroke?
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
I do, yes. I know other people do not though. I think there's a case to be made for both ways.
@mikeulintz868625 күн бұрын
Good info...!! Can't wait too implement..you did a terrific job....Good Work..!!!
@Amateur_Pool25 күн бұрын
@@mikeulintz8686 thank you!
@CueBallKRD3 ай бұрын
Another great way to learn to stay down after your shot is to practice hitting the cue ball spot to spot and have it come back and hit your cue tip. Be sure to watch the cue ball as it goes down the table and comes back.
@casperaudi74762 күн бұрын
Your correct with leg still and head popping up because i send it in other videos so thank you.
@floydweeks61032 ай бұрын
Thank you found myself in that same exact situation I grew up shooting pool and I just now am learning the professional way of shooting keep going man you are doing good
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
@floydweeks6103 thanks, Floyd
@wdiddy14 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing what works for you.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
For sure! Thanks for watching it!
@qballer16994 ай бұрын
Another tip on staying down is to count to 3 after your shot. Actually watch the ball drop before moving. Helps with getting to know the table as well.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
That's a great tip!
@metellus815225 күн бұрын
Good tips! Loving the pool table space bro!
@Amateur_Pool24 күн бұрын
@@metellus8152 thanks, bro!
@yusufhasan3024 ай бұрын
Good advice! I would like to see more videos like this one Learned a lot from video Short and simple
@josephnewcomb56704 ай бұрын
Having a smooth straight stroke is very important :) Solid fundamental is a key to playing high level pocket billiards
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@josephnewcomb5670 100%
@josephnewcomb56704 ай бұрын
@Amateur_Pool A Family friend of mine taught Me all this when I first started playing @13 :) he was Texas 9 Ball Champion in his younger years
@akquicksilver2 ай бұрын
Guilty as charged. Good stuff. I know all this, but applying takes discipline.
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
For sure!
@Zxcbr267Ай бұрын
Your absolutely spot on. Thanks from🏴
@seanscanlon90674 ай бұрын
Another thing you can do in practice to help you get used to staying down on the shot is to have someone stand behind you and hold a cue butt an inch or so above your head while you are down on the shot so that if you jump up on it, you whack your head against the cue butt. Then when you get used to staying down you no longer need this method, especially as you cannot really use it anytime other than in practice. You can also when down on the shot say the word 'back' to yourself in your head when on the back part of your final backswing and then say the word 'hit' as you make contact with the cue ball, which can help you stay focussed on timing the cue making contact with the cue ball and can help you stay down.
@veronicahawthorne34524 ай бұрын
I’m loving the “back, hit” method! 👍
@seanscanlon90674 ай бұрын
@@veronicahawthorne3452 I cannot claim it as my own idea and it is from an author called W. Timothy Gallwey/Timothy Gallwey who wrote a series of books called The Inner Game of ___________. One was called The Inner Game of Tennis where the method used was 'bounce' and then 'hit' for whenever the opponent returned the tennis ball and you would say the word 'bounce' if the ball landed on the court on your side of the net and say 'hit' when you made contact when returning it. The idea being not to fill your head with several technical thoughts, as well as to be looking at the ball as it contacts your racket strings, rather than looking away to see where the ball would be heading before you had even hit it and risked making a bad contact. The Inner Game of Golf was another, where you used saying the 'back' and 'hit' method at the end of your backswing and when the club head makes contact with the golf ball, so as again not to fill your head with several technical thoughts and to also be looking down at the ball to say 'hit' at the point of contact, meaning that you are not prematurely raising your head on the shot to see the flight of your ball. I just thought the back/hit method could possibly work for cue sports too.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Great tip. Getting hot on the head would make you stay down, for sure!
@matthewpugliese932215 сағат бұрын
Been shooting 300 years. Good advice! Pbia guys may discount follow though but that is where the FEEL exists
@Amateur_Pool6 сағат бұрын
300 years!!!! Sheesh, lol
@Sam-di8nmАй бұрын
Thanks for your advice. What pool cue do you use?
@Amateur_PoolАй бұрын
it's a cuetec true wood 2
@joshuagriffin671011 күн бұрын
Very helpful video man keep making them it's good advice
@Amateur_Pool9 күн бұрын
Thanks
@maltandbarley-ti8ck2 ай бұрын
I would really appreciate you showing us how to play a long pot when the natural angle is also sending the cue ball into the opposite top pocket. How do you make sure of avoiding the in off ?. Many thanks. (Liked and Subscribed)
@douglasbyrd7412Ай бұрын
I find it easy to emphasize my follow through on draw shots; tip to the cloth. How do you do emphasize the follow through on high action?
@Amateur_PoolАй бұрын
I do it the same way for every shot. I try to imagine myself hitting the object ball with my cue, not the cueball.
@GordonPyzik3 ай бұрын
If you use very high engish then its ok to make a finger tip bridge. For me its the only way to strike to cue ball at the very top. Mike Segal and others do this bridge when using high english
@willshire3164 ай бұрын
Nice tips and after watching this video I showed it to one of my teammates and he went from a SL3 to a SL5 in APA just on the bridge tip alone
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@willshire316 🙌
@DianneJabalee3 ай бұрын
My first time watching your video,,, love it, thank you👍🇨🇦
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
@@DianneJabalee awesome! Thanks for checking it out!
@brianducharme886423 күн бұрын
Thank you brother for the awesome pointers!! 👌
@Amateur_Pool22 күн бұрын
@@brianducharme8864 🤜🤛
@acedrumminman21 күн бұрын
Took lessons with Tony Robles...for the staying down on the shot, he had me remain motionless till all the balls stopped moving and the object ball fell into the box. It was painful at first but it worked pretty well.
@Amateur_Pool21 күн бұрын
great advice!
@ldenorio2 ай бұрын
where are your eyes focused on when you take the shot, are you watching the tip of cue stick, the spot on the cue ball or past the cue ball?
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
What a great question.. this seems to be a debate lately. I always look at the hit point on the object ball, but I know other people look at the cue ball. I think there's a case to be made for both ways
@rroachman6923 сағат бұрын
Im gonna try the straight leg tonight. Thanks man
@rroachman695 сағат бұрын
I tried it. You're right, it's uncomfortable at first... but it worked. Thanks for the info
@barryclark25824 ай бұрын
A question Josh , if you have your bridge hand flat on the table how do you put top spin on the cue Ball????? Tip is low Angle is downward !!!!! Please explain
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@barryclark2582 I bend my knuckles up, while keeping weight on my palm.. the key is stability
@22nstewart4 ай бұрын
I like the coaching, keep it in the rotation. Also, i don't know why but i had to resubscribe .... Thanks KZbin🤨
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@22nstewart you're not the first person to tell me that... so annoying. Thanks for the re-sub!
@BuNNDoGG18 күн бұрын
Thanks and Good bless Charly.
@Amateur_Pool18 күн бұрын
@@BuNNDoGG thank you!
@brettcreech34904 күн бұрын
Great video Josh.😎
@Amateur_Pool4 күн бұрын
thank you
@bicivelo3 ай бұрын
Just found this channel. Liked and subbed. Great tips! Thanks you!
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
@@bicivelo thank you for the sub!
@gabrielramirez99693 ай бұрын
Well, you made it so simply easily to understand thank you.
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
My Pleasure! Thank you for watching
@RamboUnchained4 ай бұрын
Please tell me where you got your table spots! Drop a link if you can
Bridging with a high looped bridge may not be for everyone but with enough practice it can really help on certain shots.
@danathomas78703 ай бұрын
Spot on….. I can add a couple of more…. That would be rushing your shot…. And not walking around the table completely before deciding what to shoot…..
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
@danathomas7870 both are good ones! See them all the time.
@mikescorpio13Ай бұрын
2 actions where you gonna take so much more time on every shot,making the game more boring than you already.... walking around the table has got to be the most stupid i read so far making shots that are supposed to take 10 seconds into 2 minutes walking around seeding doubt in your mind. Why dont you add every player should stupidly put the tip of their cue at the angle and hit spot of object ball like 95% of dummies are doing leaving chalk residue on tables....
@danathomas7870Ай бұрын
@ everyone that shoots on an advanced level, already knows that you have no idea what you’re doing… So I don’t have to convince you of anything. Because you obviously know it all. Good luck with your game.
@Pumpkinpoolandbilliards-dg3nb2 ай бұрын
I did notice that when I tightened my bridge, I ran a table and didn't miss. A friend of mine told me that you have to come up with a style or routine when you play. Like in the NBA Reggie Miller and Cartwright had an unorthodox style of play, but they were consistent and made it work. One of them would circle the basketball before every shot but it worked out for him. The other one moved it left and right before every shot. I was also told by some great players to do 3 pauses on all your shots. When the pool tip is next to the cue ball count 1 2 3. When you pull back, you pause on the back swing and count 1 2. and when you follow through you stay down and count 1 2 3 4. He also said that pro players have a slower swing. Beginner and intermediate players swing fast. What I used to do to stay down every time is say to myself "go down, stay down". Kind of the same idea of where you do all the work to get extremely low on each shot and it takes a lot of work to step back up or jump up. The one thing you didn't mention is how a lot of players do an elbow drop that screws up their game. I was told to eliminate that elbow drop to better your game. What I do is tense my back shoulder and neck to eliminate that elbow drop and it has made me play better. Aka stroke correcter. Thanks for all your information that you share and I wish I could play you one day.
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
@Pumpkinpoolandbilliards-dg3nb thank you! Maybe we'll run into each other one day. I'd be happy to play ya!
@Pumpkinpoolandbilliards-dg3nb2 ай бұрын
@@Amateur_Pool Tomorrow I play APA 8 ball and 9 ball at Brewski's (formerly known as Tilted Kilt) in Bolingbrook Illinois. I am a 5 in 8 ball and a 6 in 9 ball. I am the guy on the team who has to play the highest players on the other teams so I have to up my game some more.
@wayneque2101Ай бұрын
A good video, you’re information, is right on, keep up with your good work, and thanks. I will be looking forward to more posts.😀👍
@Amateur_PoolАй бұрын
@@wayneque2101 thank you!
@Amani-0047Күн бұрын
nah Bro, this was very helpful!! thanks! easy to hit the like button!
@Amateur_Pool6 сағат бұрын
Thank you, bro!
@nickyak3108Ай бұрын
Thank you. Really like the advice
@JohnAdolfBelandres2 ай бұрын
Nice advice sir at least I have an idea now thank you for your stuff like that
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
Of course! Thank you for watching!
@isaiahluetjen19 күн бұрын
Something I like to do to not lift off the table too quick is simply mellow out doubt would be #4 and it goes hand in hand with #3 you always visualize your shot and execute without a doubt you’ll make it everybody lifts off the table or hold they’re bridge better if they’re confident
@benfgreatestever89154 ай бұрын
My favorite bridge hand ever is Corey Deuel's when he makes a closed bridge, but he floats his palm and is entirely on his fingertips haha, I guess with insane talent and practice hours you can make it work.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@benfgreatestever8915 when you have his talent, I guess it doesn't matter
@benfgreatestever89154 ай бұрын
@@Amateur_Pool you have to wonder how much better he could be with textbook technique from day 1; also his fingers bend like crazy so he's got more surface area on the table than typical people.
@MechanicsWorstNightmare4 ай бұрын
Do you have any drills that help increase your run outs?
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
That depends on what is preventing you from running out. If you're missing shots, you want to practice shot making (stroke) drills (like this one kzbin.infoan-Z7mPzi14?feature=share ). If you're having trouble shaping, run cue ball control drills (like this one kzbin.info560jyILyCxM?feature=share ). If it's pattern play that's messing you up, throw up 5-6 balls and think about the pattern before you start running out. I also have several "pattern play" videos on my channel that can help you get into the right mindset of thinking about your patterns. Good luck!
@barrymccoy2127Ай бұрын
Great advice. Thank you.
@Amateur_PoolАй бұрын
🙌🙌
@SlugDropsonheads2 ай бұрын
Oh thank God... He isn't saying I can't use an open bridge. I hate when people say using an open bridge is a mistake, that's just not true. The suggestion on the bridge was great!
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
For sure! You can use any type of bridge you want, but you just want it to be stable. For newer players especially, a fingertip bridge tends to move around a lot more.
@shereemcniel-coakley2624 ай бұрын
This is great advice. I catch myself popping up sometimes.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
me 2!
@gstevecox4 ай бұрын
Many thanks for the fantastic tips !
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
@@gstevecox 🙌🙌
@danieldamian48704 ай бұрын
Good stuff brother...really made me think!
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@TheMadmaxx19704 ай бұрын
Great instruction of fundamentals.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@lakshmikpunugu47352 ай бұрын
Good video..learnt a lot...
@arkadiyemelyanov322 ай бұрын
Liked and subscribed!
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
@@arkadiyemelyanov32 thank you!
@mic23492 ай бұрын
Great video!
@Amateur_Pool2 ай бұрын
@@mic2349 thank you
@dereksarber39633 ай бұрын
#2 & #3 are big for me. I've improved a lot... But my fundamentals can kill me from time to time. I'm too inconsistent. One day... I can't run balls together... Bad fundamentals.The next day... I beat a 652 6-5 in 8 ball with great fundamentals. So I agree with this. Those are big! I agree.
@Tiondagoat22 күн бұрын
i just started 2 days ago i just learned how to stop making the ball jump but i still need improvement can’t hit the balls right or get a spin to them only can hit straight on balls no type of side shots or anything
@Amateur_Pool22 күн бұрын
@Lotionuser just keep practicing. It takes a little time
@paulfarrell879216 күн бұрын
I have learned more in this few minutes than a lifetime.
@Amateur_Pool16 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@paulfarrell879215 күн бұрын
@@Amateur_Pool You're welcome.
@davewhyte81694 ай бұрын
going to sound stupid, but in practice, try closing your eyes just before stroking. it's very easy to stay down (not pop up) and stroke through the ball while your eyes are closed. repeat that over and over and your body will relax more during the stroke until it becomes muscle memory. feels real good to close em on your final back stroke, stay down and listen until the object ball falls in the pocket before you open your eyes then stand up.
@Amateur_Pool4 ай бұрын
doesn't sound stupid at all! Closing your eyes tricks your brain into not knowing when you will hit the cue ball, thus eliminating the "clench up." I've actually showed this in a shorts reels before. It's also how I show newer players to get draw on the cue ball. Great stuff!
@wilfredonegron81993 ай бұрын
Excellent. Thanks for sharing.
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching! :)
@WHAT-gm1xm3 ай бұрын
Can I apply this method on snooker?
@Amateur_Pool3 ай бұрын
@WHAT-gm1xm I don't play snooker but I imagine you can