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Intermediate Billiards Lessons Little Rock AR

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Sports Authority
(501) 224-7137
11700 Chenal Parkway
Little Rock, AR
Academy
(501) 210-6030
6100 Warden Rd
Sherwood, AR
Dick's Sporting Goods
501-624-0200
1420 Higdon Ferry Road
Hot Springs, AR
Home Billiard Sales
479 783 2650
3002 Spradling Avenue
Fort Smith, AR
Nite Lite Co
(501) 227-9050
3801 Woodland Heights Rd
Little Rock, AR
Jones Bros Distributing Co.
(501)372-0168
309W Broadway
North Little Rock, AR
Academy
(501) 217-3700
11400 West Markham (between S Shackleford and S Bowman)
Little Rock, AR
Sharks Pool and Billiards
(501) 624-4272
634 Malvern Ave
Hot Springs, AR
Academy
(479) 494-1740
5001 Phoenix Avenue (at Airport Blvd)
Fort Smith, AR
Academy Sports & Outdoors
(501) 217-3700
11400 W Markham St
Little Rock, AR
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20 Tips for Intermediate Players

By George Fels
BD Consulting Editor

SO, MAYBE YOU already know how to stroke a ball, and the difference between follow and draw. Your game still can go south on you in a hurry. Here are some tips to consider when you feel the need to make a few adjustments.

1. Every sport played with a ball demands balance, and that surely includes cue games. Precisely how you assume your shooting stance isn't nearly as important as your being solidly planted - solid enough that you could resist a shove on your shooting side.

2. A stroke should be just that - a smooth, rhythmic motion with a beginning, middle and end. Don't rush it, and don't choke it off.

3. One of the key secrets to longer runs in pool is to leave yourself position for angled shots rather than straight-in shots. Angle shots offer you far, far more options for cue-ball position.

4. By all means, bet a few bucks. Morals, aside, you'll learn to handle the game's unique pressures much faster and much better.

5. The best way to learn position play is to strive to do whatever's easiest (whenever possible; it won't always be).

6. In all the cue games, you directly control zilch except for your body and your cue. (You affect the cue ball only indirectly, and the object balls far less than that.) When your game isn't going well, your body mechanics are the first thing you should check.

7. When you need to send an object ball along the rail with speed, jacking up your cue slightly seems to help avoid "wiggling" the ball in the pocket jaws; it also eliminates throw.

8. Structured practice is much more valuable than the mere abstract hitting of loose balls. Practice 9-ball or straight pool, and/or some drills.

9. Mosconi's No. 1 tip: Don't waste your time with players who are worse than you; play with better competitors, and you'll learn more.

10. Don't hold the cue in your fingertips; it's not a teacup. And don't strangle the cue either; it's not a baseball bat.

11. When contemplating where to send the cue ball next, make center table your first option.

12. The world does not come to an end when you miss a shot, or miss position, or lose a game or lose the session. Lighten up. You'll enjoy yourself more, and win more often.

13. Your most formidable opponent by far in the cue games is the voice(s) in your head. Create a simple command or phrase to block out that interference, such as "Calm," "Feel the ball," or "Play your game."

14. Chalk up before every shot, and do it right. The chalk should move, not the cue.

15. Don't overhit the balls. It's a definite symptom of anxiety, costs you accuracy, and is near-suicidal on any table with tough pockets.

16. The universal instruction concerning object balls frozen to the rail is false. Do not attempt to hit object ball and rail at the same time; you won't even be close. Aim to hit the rail about a credit-card's width in front of the ball.

17. Three to five practice strokes are plenty. More than that, and ...

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