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Do you aim at the cue ball or object ball?

Best results can vary from one person to another, but it is generally recommended to focus on the object ball (or the center of the ghost ball, desired contact point, ball-hit fraction, or a point on the cloth or cushion) instead of the cue ball during the final stroke.
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Where do you look when shooting in pool?

Get your eyes on the shot line while standing. Keep your eyes sharp on the OB or cushion target as you drop into your stance and shooting position. As your bridge hand approaches the table, start sighting back & forth between CB & OB.
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How do the pros aim in pool?

Pros look through the ghost ball at the object ball's real edge, not through ghost ball center into empty space. It's ghost ball aim that feels like aiming, even stroking, directly at the contact point. You believe cue stick and cue nose are on the contact point line even if they aren't!
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Why do pool players aim at the bottom of the cue ball?

“Bottom-of-the-ball” aiming is a way to visualize the required contact point (CP) on the object ball (assuming no throw).
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What is the rule for the cue ball in pool?

When a player has the cue ball in hand behind the head string (in the kitchen), he must drive the cue ball to a point across the head string before it contacts either a cushion, an object ball, or returns to the kitchen. Failure to do so is a foul if a referee is presiding over a match.
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AIMING & SIGHTING | Cue Ball or Object Ball?! From the archives...

How do you position a cue ball?

For a stun shot, most people know the right answer: in the tangent line direction, perpendicular to the OB direction. This is the 90° rule. For a rolling CB, the cue ball changes direction by about 30° for a wide range of cut shots (1/4 to 3/4 ball hit). This is the 30° rule.
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Why is my aim so bad in pool?

The reason for most misses is poor delivery of the cue to and through the cue ball. No aiming system in the world will help the player who can't deliver a precise and accurate stroke.
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What is the easiest pool aiming system?

Ghost Ball Aiming Method: Easy and Effective Aiming for Pool

The ghost ball system is pretty much the main aiming method for most pool players. I'll say 95% of people use it, from very beginner to very high caliber players. The “ghost ball” is basically an imaginary ball.
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How do you hit more accurately in pool?

7 Tips & Drills to Instantly Improve Your Pool Skills
  1. Practice Your Grip When Leaning Over the Billiards Table. ...
  2. Work on Your Shooting Stance Over the Pool Table. ...
  3. Align Your Body Properly For the Snooker Table. ...
  4. Imagine an Aiming Line Down the Billiards Table. ...
  5. Practice swinging like a pendulum. ...
  6. Work on your bridges.
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Where do you hit a cue ball to make it roll back?

If the target ball is near the cue ball, this is simple: Slightly behind center, strike the cue ball. If the target ball is farther away, you'll need to strike the cue ball a little deeper below center.
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Does the cue ball have to hit a ball and the rim?

A rail must be hit by either the cue ball or any other ball after the cue ball contacts the object ball. A pocketed ball counts as a rail. A sentence that should answer many questions is: “ANY ball must go to a rail AFTER LEGAL contact unless your ball is made.”
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What happens if you only hit the cue ball?

If you hit the opponent's object ball directly with the cue ball, it's a foul, which leads to a penalty. Hitting the opponent's ball directly with the cue ball makes you lose your turn and allows the opponent to move the cue ball in the next shot.
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Why do I keep jumping the cue ball?

If the cue ball jumps up when you stroke, you either struck it too far below center, elevated the butt of the cue stick, jerked the cue stick back, shot too hard, or all of the above. Try it again.
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Which eye do you aim with in pool?

Doesn't matter, so long as we get our eyes in the right place, which is different for every player. Some players are so strongly dominant in one eye that for them, shooting with their dominant eye directly over the cue actually is correct.
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