Snooker, as well as other billiards games, are more than just enjoyable games to play with family and friends. Expanding your table game-playing skills beyond the traditional 8-ball game played in bars and pool halls worldwide allows you to be a more creative player. More than this, teaching your children about the physics of the game as well as its discipline is rewarding for both their schooling as well as their character.
Patience
Setting up a shot and choosing the right shot requires patience on the part of the player. Professional players choose each shot with a clear idea in mind for how the next shot will be played, as well as the shot after that. Thinking ahead such as this disciplines the mind and requires you to think carefully about what you are doing. Because this cannot be done quickly, it forces you to slow down your thought processes to consider all the information about what ball to play, where the cue ball will end up and how hard you must hit the cue ball.
Coordination
Playing snooker requires coordination and physical dexterity. Proper hand-eye coordination is necessary to strike the cue ball with the cue at the right spot to produce the correct amount of spin necessary to put the cue ball where you want it. More than this, you must correctly gauge how hard to hit the cue ball and relate the power of your stroke to how much spin is imparted to the cue ball. This coordination can be learned only by practicing regularly.
Strategy
Snooker is more than a game of simply pocketing balls. You must come to understand your opponent's weaknesses and what shots she has a difficult time making. In particular, the game of snooker requires you to occasionally create a difficult situation for your opponent to shoot from. This is called a "snooker." In this situation, you must place the cue ball after your shot in a position where your opponent cannot strike her intended ball. In such a case, you would score points and your opponent's turn would be nearly pointless.
Advanced Math
Advanced math does take a part in playing any game of pool, and the best players understand the mathematics behind the game. Trigonometry helps you note how shots bank off of other balls or cushions. Additionally, physics principles are used to determine how the balls react to one another as well as the effect of spin on the cue ball. Many advanced math instructors, particularly at the college level, use billiards games such as snooker to help provide their students with practical usage of the theories they teach.
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