I hope you enjoy this drill that I combined with some lessons on positional play. I tried to get as much information as possible out of my run. Let me know how you did in this drill.
Great video, I just wanted to point out a minor error at 1:30. You said the margin for error is smaller, what you actually mean was the margin for error is *larger*. Large margin for error = more room to make an error without affecting the outcome = easier shot.
Vinay Pai Margin for error is smaller when you're considering where the cue ball is going. Margin for error is greater if you're going directly in the line of shot. He's trying to avoid going into the line of shot because the margin of error is greater...meaning his speed, accuracy has to be dead on in order to stop on the shot line.
Love your drills, videos, etc... but I think I like the red dot when you present where you are hitting the cue ball rather than the picture of the cue. Keep up the great work!
Sharivari is there a way that you could do both? Start with the dot then show the where the tip should contact the cue ball from my POV? Personally, I actually like it how you did in this video because sometimes I think I’m hitting a particular spot on the cue ball when in actuality I’m not. But I definitely can understand why some players prefer the red dot visual. Thank you in advance 🙏🏼
Super Video 👍🏼😁sehr begeistert bin das du es auch auf Deutsch geschrieben hast. Sehr gute Erklärung auch mit dem Winkel weil wir mehr mit der Weißen machen können, vielen Dank für die tollen Info's und Übungen bitte mach weiter so freu mich auf noch mehr Videos und Anleitungen 👏🏼👌🏼
Idt people understand how much dedication and focus it takes to consistently upload instructional content that engages your audience and subscribers. Thank you bro!
I love this drill and it will be helpful with 8-all as well as 9-ball. However, the one thing o would LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, for you to show us is some ways to do some carom shots. I play in a 9-ball league but it’s what I call a slop league because we never have to call ANY shots, not even the 9-ball. It drives me nuts because people just smack balls around the table and if something goes in they still get to shoot, and if the 9 goes in BY ACCIDENT, they WIN! So, I’d love to hear what you think about playing with these kinds of rules. What do you think is the best way to play? Any carom ideas? Any tips you could give me and everyone else would be GREAT! Thanks! Dee😁👍
I personally prefer in eight ball for all shots to have to be called. I absolutely HATE slop. Just hate it. Yes, luck comes into play in any sport. But slopping balls in just irritates me. And when I say call all shots, I mean just call the pocket, not if you are going to carom shots or anything like that....just call the pocket you want the ball to go into. You can still get some lucky sloppy shots this way, but it is far better than not having to call a pocket. I think it would also be good for nine ball.
@@jamesdavis8731 James, somebody has to set the rules. Why can't it be you, bro? Let them know what's wrong with their rules and how everyone can improve their game if they have to call their shots rather than just slamming the balls all around -- Poke & Hope style. Good luck.
That's definetly an interesting topic. Thanks for the suggestion, I've put it on my list, that unfortunately is 500 miles long already. But I kepp it in mind :)
Every time i plan ahead during a shot, I wind up missing the shot in the first place haha. But im slowly getting better. Good timing on the video because i go to pool hall every saturday with my friend \,,/>,
@@Sharivari .I`m doing well Sharivari. I hope you are the same. Practicing a lot and doing my best to control that crazy cue ball.😊 Using a new cue I bought with a conical shaft shape and I`m using an open bridge which seems to be the standard in Europe. I`m doing better with it than my pro taper cue with a index finger wrapped around the shaft. Thanks for asking. Take good care.
Wouldnt be easier to use low-mid left on the first shot to get on the right side of the 2 (thus sending it to the left-middle pocket) and then on the right side of the 3 and go up for the 4 with a soft 2 rails shot ?
What cue are you using and what tip do you have on it? I currently am using a xpure cue with the kamui black medium that come on it but find it hardens quickly and does want to hold chalk well.
I use the same cue/tip. Are you maintaining your tip between play? Using a tip tool to rough up and shape your tip between sessions will help it hold chalk.
@@Sharivari I currently am waiting on my new cue and shafts to come. I bought a Predator sitka 2 cue with a 30in z3 shaft and a 314/3 shaft both with a kamui black soft tip. I'm so excited the cue is beautiful and all my friends believe heavily on predator shafts. Will update how it plays when I get it.
Nice video. I agree with the difficulty level and I can do this drill. Have you tried the Max Eberle drill he posted a few weeks ago? It's very similar but with all 15 balls. I've been trying for a few weeks now and still haven't completed it yet.
If you're talking about the drrill where Max has all the balls around the rails w/ the 15 on the center spot, I agree, it's a great drill and difficult. Sharivari shows us how to get position on each and every one of those shots. I don't see where Max has done this. He can just do it. Sarivari, thank you for your well done videos and great teachings. Keep up the great work.
No I haven't seen it yet. Unfortunately I don't find much time to play or practise pool anymore. The only time when I am in the pool hall is when I am recording footage for my videos. But I will have a look at the video :)
Can you make a video solely on ‘throw’. I know pool pretty well but the concept is difficult for me to truly grasp. I know throw is induced depending on what kind of english you put on the cue ball transfers to the OB and throws the OB depending on the kind of english that is transferred. I get all that. My issue is actually seeing it make a difference. Like how much can the OB really be thrown. Is it really a significant difference. To me it seems like it barely does anything. Ik that i am wrong because the term throw is used quite a lot in pro pool. So obviously it matters. I just have trouble seeing the effect throw actually has. If you can help in any way, that would be great. Thank you👍🏼
i was making some similar drill a few times past 2 weeks and i have collapsed three times on seven and few times on eight very frustrating drill heh ;) my drill was harder i suppose maybe i should start with this proposition
Using unnecessary sidespin makes aiming more difficult , and shots can be missed if shot is hit too soft . The spin will THROW the object ball , causing a miss. You can play very good pool by just using CENTRER AXIS AIMING , which means CENTERBALL , FOLLOW and DRAW . Cueing center on a MAJORITY of your shots. When using English , stay within1 TIP width of center , MAXIMUM, any further you will miss more shots because you have to know how to adust your aim when using extreme English. Also , the more you hit the cue ball off center , your CUE may cause the cue ball to to SQUIRT , to the left (rt.eng.) or right (lft.eng.) ,causing a likely miss , this is know as DEFLECTION. Master CENTER BALL AIMING first , then experiment aiming with English . Where to aim using center vs. English is difficult because they have two different aiming points , something which takes time for a player to figure out for himself. Good luck and keep stroking. 🤗
Those shots are about “feel” so that’s what you have to work on. Not to discredit the previous person but playing that shoot over and over will only teach you how o hit “that” shot and that moment you don’t have “that” shot you’re right back to square one since you now have no feel for this new shot.
You both already gave very good answers. But I just received a similiar question on my Facebook a few minutes ago and wanted to share my answer with you guys: "You have to trust that you know how much spin you have to add. If you have now clue how much spin you need, just trial and error until you can rely on your feeling. And if you are a more technical player who needs a scientific explanation for things like this, you could use the technique from my "How Spin Changes The Path of the Cueball" video. But I personally would recommend that you are able to feel the shot."
@@400fps What I'm advising him to do is a tried and trusted method of developing "feel". Your brain and motor functions learn "feel" by repetition. I've heard numerous pro's and coaches say, if you're bad at a particular type of shot, you need to practice it. We get better at pool over time because we shoot similar types of shots very often and our subconscious is pretty damn good at recognising shots that we've played really similar shots to in the past, and making adjustments based on the differences, and learning specific types of shots is always easier with errors fresh in your mind for you to make adjustments from. In this type of shot in particular, as Sharivari said above, learning a feel for them is trial and error, and if you set up the same shot again and again, you can see exactly where you're going wrong and make adjustments. If the guy who asked this question is struggling with this same type of shot each time, he can learn why and then use that information on similar shots in the future. This is why drills where you set the balls in the same positions each time are so useful - they have you playing the same types of shots over and over and learning from your mistakes quickly.
@@Sharivari The shot you are talking about has become a VERY easy shot for me because of what I learned in a previous video of yours that you mentioned in the video. Before I would have almost always used draw to get back over. But now on that shot I just find the tangent line and then adjust with a little right English. Works well every time. Also, as mentioned earlier, this is a shot you just hit hundreds, if not thousands, of times and you eventually just get the feel. Like anything else you just have to put the time in.
I have noticed that u are saying it wrong at many videos: "margine for error is small". It should be big instead of small when u clearly are discribing the big area where the cue ball can land
@@creeypiensa that is not true. Using spin always complicates making the initial ball you are trying to make. Spin can help you get around the table, that is for sure, but it should only be used when really needed. I agree, I think Sharivari uses spin too much sometimes. On a few of these shots there was no reason to use any spin at all. Maybe some high or low, but not spin. As far as pro players always using outside english on cut shots - that is only partially true. And outside english to negate gearing english on the target ball is fine when you are not worried much about the next ball. But in this case no english would have worked just as well as this was an easy shot on the nine and you would have still gotten position at the opposite short rail. Players should always always always practice getting around the table with just center high, center, and center low. It teaches you angles and how the cue ball reacts off of the target ball and the rail. English should then be introduced but used very sparingly. The guy that teaches this principle the best is Tor Lowry.
I agree that on the one ball no spin was necessary, especially because I had ball in hand. On the three ball the spin was necessary to get on the long side of the three ball. I also agree that all the other shots could've been played with no spin at all. But I prefer using some spin on these shots to a) prevent kicks b) compensate cut induced throw Some of those shots are just easier to execute with outside spin. Everytime you use inside spin it makes the shot harder of course. I also agree that everyone should be able to manouver the cueball without spin, especially to get the understanding of the natural path. At the end it's just my personal style and it increases my shotmaking.
@@jamesdavis8731 Not true at all. I myself make balls easily with outside spin and pro players too. Explain to me then why on 9-Ball pro players very often tend to go two rails after pocketing the last ball. Center ball would not do that--only outside spin. They prefer to hit the ball thick and compensate with English rather than hit the ball thin with center ball.
@@creeypiensa if there is a reason to use english then you use it. If there is NOT a reason you do not. There is a difference between using some english on cut shots when needed but no reason to use english when there is no real advantage to using it. ANY time you use english you throw another FACTOR into making a shot. ANYTIME. You should only use english when it is absolutely needed to pocket a ball or get position. Most shots do NOT reguire english. I have seen many many many players get into trouble when using english when they did not need to use it at all. Most professional players only use it when they really need it. On almost all of Sharivaris videos he is using english when it is not needed.
When you got too straight on the 3, you casually did something that's hard to do to get out of trouble. You made no explanation about what you did. Why?
It is just a high right shot. When producing that video I didn't think it poses any questions. But if you want to know something about that shot, just ask me here :)
Thanks--you have a sharper eye than I do. When I am straight on a ball, I find it very hard to get position. It's funny how some folks think straight in is desirable. Actually, that is rarely the case.
Thanks, I will. I guess there are plenty of things that you consider to be routine that are not yet in my repertoire. Hopefully, that can change. I like your videos. I just can't watch them as much as I would like to because they eat up gigs on my WiFi deal. I live in an area where one can't get unlimited gigs unless one has unlimited money.
I hope you enjoy this drill that I combined with some lessons on positional play. I tried to get as much information as possible out of my run. Let me know how you did in this drill.
Great video, I just wanted to point out a minor error at 1:30. You said the margin for error is smaller, what you actually mean was the margin for error is *larger*. Large margin for error = more room to make an error without affecting the outcome = easier shot.
Vinay Pai
Margin for error is smaller when you're considering where the cue ball is going.
Margin for error is greater if you're going directly in the line of shot.
He's trying to avoid going into the line of shot because the margin of error is greater...meaning his speed, accuracy has to be dead on in order to stop on the shot line.
@@co7366 I don't think you understood what I said. In the voiceover where he said "smaller" instead of "larger".
Another great video. Thank you. Time for practice.
Love your drills, videos, etc... but I think I like the red dot when you present where you are hitting the cue ball rather than the picture of the cue.
Keep up the great work!
Same
Okay, thanks for the feedback. I was never really sure what's the better choice.
Sharivari is there a way that you could do both? Start with the dot then show the where the tip should contact the cue ball from my POV? Personally, I actually like it how you did in this video because sometimes I think I’m hitting a particular spot on the cue ball when in actuality I’m not. But I definitely can understand why some players prefer the red dot visual. Thank you in advance 🙏🏼
@@christielawrence445 check out the Icue ball. It will help you out with this because it shows where you hit the cue ball
@@christielawrence445 Good point. I will check how that looks in my next video.
This is a great video. I recently started playing 9 Ball. This is gonna help my game improve. Thank you.
Super Video 👍🏼😁sehr begeistert bin das du es auch auf Deutsch geschrieben hast. Sehr gute Erklärung auch mit dem Winkel weil wir mehr mit der Weißen machen können, vielen Dank für die tollen Info's und Übungen bitte mach weiter so freu mich auf noch mehr Videos und Anleitungen 👏🏼👌🏼
As usual, clear and concise information calmly presented. Thank you kindly.
agreed
Thanks a lot James :)
Idt people understand how much dedication and focus it takes to consistently upload instructional content that engages your audience and subscribers. Thank you bro!
great...easy to follow and i think i will learned more here and to apply such ideas..
Great drill !! Thanks !!
I love this drill and it will be helpful with 8-all as well as 9-ball. However, the one thing o would LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, for you to show us is some ways to do some carom shots.
I play in a 9-ball league but it’s what I call a slop league because we never have to call ANY shots, not even the 9-ball. It drives me nuts because people just smack balls around the table and if something goes in they still get to shoot, and if the 9 goes in BY ACCIDENT, they WIN! So, I’d love to hear what you think about playing with these kinds of rules. What do you think is the best way to play? Any carom ideas? Any tips you could give me and everyone else would be GREAT! Thanks! Dee😁👍
I personally prefer in eight ball for all shots to have to be called. I absolutely HATE slop. Just hate it. Yes, luck comes into play in any sport. But slopping balls in just irritates me. And when I say call all shots, I mean just call the pocket, not if you are going to carom shots or anything like that....just call the pocket you want the ball to go into. You can still get some lucky sloppy shots this way, but it is far better than not having to call a pocket.
I think it would also be good for nine ball.
DeeEll86442 sounds like you should try playing 10 ball...
@@jamesdavis8731 James, somebody has to set the rules. Why can't it be you, bro? Let them know what's wrong with their rules and how everyone can improve their game if they have to call their shots rather than just slamming the balls all around -- Poke & Hope style. Good luck.
That's definetly an interesting topic. Thanks for the suggestion, I've put it on my list, that unfortunately is 500 miles long already. But I kepp it in mind :)
Every time i plan ahead during a shot, I wind up missing the shot in the first place haha. But im slowly getting better. Good timing on the video because i go to pool hall every saturday with my friend \,,/>,
Superb as always
Thank you Yude :)
SOLID shot from 3 to 4.. thanks for video
Thanks! Not the shot I wanted to have to play though.
I feel like a Drill with just balls 5 thru 9 would be awesome alone!
Your videos are good
Very nice
like all of your videos, this one is EXCELLENT!
Thanks Don!
Good job as always.
Thanks Danelius!
Hello. Avery good lesson I think. I plan on using it regularly. Thank you.
Hi Brian. Great to hear that. How are things going?
@@Sharivari .I`m doing well Sharivari. I hope you are the same. Practicing a lot and doing my best to control that crazy cue ball.😊 Using a new cue I bought with a conical shaft shape and I`m using an open bridge which seems to be the standard in Europe. I`m doing better with it than my pro taper cue with a index finger wrapped around the shaft. Thanks for asking. Take good care.
Wouldnt be easier to use low-mid left on the first shot to get on the right side of the 2 (thus sending it to the left-middle pocket) and then on the right side of the 3 and go up for the 4 with a soft 2 rails shot ?
Yes, that would've been maybe a touch easier regarding position from 3 to the 4, I agree.
When I'm "on the Nine" , I like to make believe I'm shooting the Eight and trying to get shape on the Nine to avoid choking. 😀
Really enjoyed
Glad to hear!
And it's a great way to clean your rice before you cook it! 😀
Thank you, another great drill to keep one in stroke!
You're welcome Stan :)
thank you! 👋🏻🎱👄🎱🤚🏻 much 💚🔫🐛 sharivari! :) blesses
What is your Fargo?
Awesome!!!
Like your channel...
keep em coming ;) Nice drill
Another great video :)
More drills please!
Got it. Will publish new drills soon!
Thank you!
So useful!
What cue are you using and what tip do you have on it? I currently am using a xpure cue with the kamui black medium that come on it but find it hardens quickly and does want to hold chalk well.
I use the same cue/tip. Are you maintaining your tip between play? Using a tip tool to rough up and shape your tip between sessions will help it hold chalk.
I am using a Lucasi Hybrid shaft with Kamui Brown Medium on it. Works pretty fine for me.
@@Sharivari I currently am waiting on my new cue and shafts to come. I bought a Predator sitka 2 cue with a 30in z3 shaft and a 314/3 shaft both with a kamui black soft tip. I'm so excited the cue is beautiful and all my friends believe heavily on predator shafts. Will update how it plays when I get it.
Nice video. I agree with the difficulty level and I can do this drill. Have you tried the Max Eberle drill he posted a few weeks ago? It's very similar but with all 15 balls. I've been trying for a few weeks now and still haven't completed it yet.
If you're talking about the drrill where Max has all the balls around the rails w/ the 15 on the center spot, I agree, it's a great drill and difficult. Sharivari shows us how to get position on each and every one of those shots. I don't see where Max has done this. He can just do it. Sarivari, thank you for your well done videos and great teachings. Keep up the great work.
@@joebutts2255 yes, that's the one. Maybe Sharivari can do a video explaining that drill.
No I haven't seen it yet. Unfortunately I don't find much time to play or practise pool anymore. The only time when I am in the pool hall is when I am recording footage for my videos. But I will have a look at the video :)
Can you make a video solely on ‘throw’. I know pool pretty well but the concept is difficult for me to truly grasp. I know throw is induced depending on what kind of english you put on the cue ball transfers to the OB and throws the OB depending on the kind of english that is transferred. I get all that. My issue is actually seeing it make a difference. Like how much can the OB really be thrown. Is it really a significant difference. To me it seems like it barely does anything. Ik that i am wrong because the term throw is used quite a lot in pro pool. So obviously it matters. I just have trouble seeing the effect throw actually has. If you can help in any way, that would be great. Thank you👍🏼
Hi Mahdee. I made a video about that topic, here it is:
ua-cam.com/video/2k9bjOFwxVE/v-deo.html
Playing to pot the ball while also playing to not leave a shot for your opponent can be a tough time on the table- practice is the only answer.
Wonder how many people are here just to improve their Arcadium play . .
i was making some similar drill a few times past 2 weeks and i have collapsed three times on seven and few times on eight very frustrating drill heh ;) my drill was harder i suppose maybe i should start with this proposition
Yes, sometimes you also need to do some drills that will gain you confidence for example, not always the ultra tough ones.
4:52, that's why a spin is more dangerous. That would have been a miss on a Diamond table .
But at least he was putting some good throw on the cue ball for the five along the rail.
Can it be done without any sidespin?
Using unnecessary sidespin makes aiming more difficult , and shots can be missed if shot is hit too soft . The spin will THROW the object ball , causing a miss.
You can play very good pool by just using CENTRER AXIS AIMING , which means CENTERBALL , FOLLOW and DRAW . Cueing center on a MAJORITY of your shots. When using English , stay within1 TIP width of center , MAXIMUM, any further you will miss more shots because you have to know how to adust your aim when using extreme English.
Also , the more you hit the cue ball off center , your CUE may cause the cue ball to to SQUIRT , to the left (rt.eng.) or right (lft.eng.) ,causing a likely miss , this is know as DEFLECTION. Master CENTER BALL AIMING first , then experiment aiming with English .
Where to aim using center vs. English is difficult because they have two different aiming points , something which takes time for a player to figure out for himself. Good luck and keep stroking. 🤗
"Line" position is better than "Zone" position
Your method of getting on the 6 ball, has always proved tough for me. I always seem to find the side pocket...
Then set that kind of shot up and shoot it over and over again until you don't pot the cue ball anymore, that's how you eliminate weak shots 👍
Those shots are about “feel” so that’s what you have to work on. Not to discredit the previous person but playing that shoot over and over will only teach you how o hit “that” shot and that moment you don’t have “that” shot you’re right back to square one since you now have no feel for this new shot.
You both already gave very good answers. But I just received a similiar question on my Facebook a few minutes ago and wanted to share my answer with you guys:
"You have to trust that you know how much spin you have to add. If you have now clue how much spin you need, just trial and error until you can rely on your feeling. And if you are a more technical player who needs a scientific explanation for things like this, you could use the technique from my "How Spin Changes The Path of the Cueball" video. But I personally would recommend that you are able to feel the shot."
@@400fps What I'm advising him to do is a tried and trusted method of developing "feel". Your brain and motor functions learn "feel" by repetition. I've heard numerous pro's and coaches say, if you're bad at a particular type of shot, you need to practice it. We get better at pool over time because we shoot similar types of shots very often and our subconscious is pretty damn good at recognising shots that we've played really similar shots to in the past, and making adjustments based on the differences, and learning specific types of shots is always easier with errors fresh in your mind for you to make adjustments from. In this type of shot in particular, as Sharivari said above, learning a feel for them is trial and error, and if you set up the same shot again and again, you can see exactly where you're going wrong and make adjustments. If the guy who asked this question is struggling with this same type of shot each time, he can learn why and then use that information on similar shots in the future. This is why drills where you set the balls in the same positions each time are so useful - they have you playing the same types of shots over and over and learning from your mistakes quickly.
@@Sharivari The shot you are talking about has become a VERY easy shot for me because of what I learned in a previous video of yours that you mentioned in the video. Before I would have almost always used draw to get back over. But now on that shot I just find the tangent line and then adjust with a little right English. Works well every time.
Also, as mentioned earlier, this is a shot you just hit hundreds, if not thousands, of times and you eventually just get the feel. Like anything else you just have to put the time in.
I would like a box of pool balls
I have noticed that u are saying it wrong at many videos: "margine for error is small". It should be big instead of small when u clearly are discribing the big area where the cue ball can land
Thanks. I recently noticed it too when rewatching a video.
Sharivari coloca sustitutos o crea un caba en español para latinos
Que? :D
@@Sharivari si podrías hacer vídeos en español me gusta tu canal muy informativo
Sharivari en español
Great drill I have to say, but you're using to many side spin for some simple shot. Sometimes the simpler is the better
Michael Ha Side spin actually makes the shot even simpler! That’s why pro players almost always put outside spin for potting the 9-ball.
@@creeypiensa that is not true. Using spin always complicates making the initial ball you are trying to make. Spin can help you get around the table, that is for sure, but it should only be used when really needed.
I agree, I think Sharivari uses spin too much sometimes. On a few of these shots there was no reason to use any spin at all. Maybe some high or low, but not spin.
As far as pro players always using outside english on cut shots - that is only partially true. And outside english to negate gearing english on the target ball is fine when you are not worried much about the next ball. But in this case no english would have worked just as well as this was an easy shot on the nine and you would have still gotten position at the opposite short rail.
Players should always always always practice getting around the table with just center high, center, and center low. It teaches you angles and how the cue ball reacts off of the target ball and the rail. English should then be introduced but used very sparingly. The guy that teaches this principle the best is Tor Lowry.
I agree that on the one ball no spin was necessary, especially because I had ball in hand. On the three ball the spin was necessary to get on the long side of the three ball. I also agree that all the other shots could've been played with no spin at all. But I prefer using some spin on these shots to
a) prevent kicks
b) compensate cut induced throw
Some of those shots are just easier to execute with outside spin. Everytime you use inside spin it makes the shot harder of course. I also agree that everyone should be able to manouver the cueball without spin, especially to get the understanding of the natural path. At the end it's just my personal style and it increases my shotmaking.
@@jamesdavis8731 Not true at all. I myself make balls easily with outside spin and pro players too. Explain to me then why on 9-Ball pro players very often tend to go two rails after pocketing the last ball. Center ball would not do that--only outside spin. They prefer to hit the ball thick and compensate with English rather than hit the ball thin with center ball.
@@creeypiensa if there is a reason to use english then you use it. If there is NOT a reason you do not. There is a difference between using some english on cut shots when needed but no reason to use english when there is no real advantage to using it.
ANY time you use english you throw another FACTOR into making a shot. ANYTIME. You should only use english when it is absolutely needed to pocket a ball or get position.
Most shots do NOT reguire english. I have seen many many many players get into trouble when using english when they did not need to use it at all. Most professional players only use it when they really need it.
On almost all of Sharivaris videos he is using english when it is not needed.
👍🇳🇿
When you got too straight on the 3, you casually did something that's hard to do to get out of trouble. You made no explanation about what you did. Why?
It is just a high right shot. When producing that video I didn't think it poses any questions. But if you want to know something about that shot, just ask me here :)
He shot it with a high right .
Thanks--you have a sharper eye than I do. When I am straight on a ball, I find it very hard to get position. It's funny how some folks think straight in is desirable. Actually, that is rarely the case.
Thanks, I will. I guess there are plenty of things that you consider to be routine that are not yet in my repertoire. Hopefully, that can change. I like your videos. I just can't watch them as much as I would like to because they eat up gigs on my WiFi deal. I live in an area where one can't get unlimited gigs unless one has unlimited money.
First