Activities Sports & Athletics How to Improve Your Pool Game Fast Share PINTEREST Email Print PepaLove/Pixabay Sports & Athletics Billiards Equipment Shots & Strokes Baseball Bicycling Bodybuilding Bowling Boxing Car Racing Cheerleading Extreme Sports Football Golf Gymnastics Ice Hockey Martial Arts Professional Wrestling Skateboarding Skating Paintball Soccer Swimming & Diving Table Tennis Tennis Track & Field Volleyball Other Activities Learn More By Matthew Sherman Matthew Sherman Matthew Sherman is an experienced pool and billiards instructor and the author of "Picture Yourself Shooting Pool." Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on 06/12/19 Practice these routines daily, or as often as you can, to become a much stronger pool player. Laser Aiming to Improve Pool Skills First, avoid what I call "hung wrist strokes." Learn the correct positions and movements of the wrist through the classic stroke. The "Laser Aim Drill" helps you master left-hand strokes using follow (topspin) to a corner pocket along a cue ball path near the third diamond, with the cue ball set a few inches from the rail. The laser trainer I recommend is ideal to add to this drill. This is not the standard cue laser that goes inside a cue stick's tip. This is a laser that rides atop a cue or your hand to 1) aim at the cue ball 2) aim on the object ball 3) review tangent lines and 4) align your stroke to show you any side-to-side flaws instantly. Perform some shooting hand strokes as best you can using follow to a distant corner pocket from the same cue ball position. The purpose is to teach the bridge hand, not the shooting hand, what a dead straight stroke feels like. Note how the correct cue laser is great for seeing one's shot line and stroke. Keeping the laser straight on any shot line is difficult, but an aspiring pro must drill enough so the laser line does not deviate from their shot line/aim line. Keep your stroke pure. Do you aim straight on from where you planned to stroke toward, or can you feel for any Carabao-style deviations that are "correcting" your stroke in the middle? That is to say, is a Carabao stroke making you score an occasional ball but your aim was wrong to begin? You don't want to feel like you're cheating your own aim technique. Master Your Stance Drill getting into a good-looking, complete pro stance. Ensure you occasionally hit the cue ball with your cue tip or ferrule once in a while — that's your commitment to getting very close to the ball at address. Next, ensure that in your stance the cue's tip is less than the width of a cube of pool chalk away from the cue ball. From here, you may play happy and be satisfied. Why? Because the width of a cue chalk is nearly half a cue ball's width. You have all the time in the world during the final stroke to miss the precise aim target you've planned to strike on the cue ball. I'm constantly asked how to improve billiards skills at speed. This will get your playing to a whole new level extremely fast. Top pro Gerda Hofstetter does more than 200 repetitions of stroke in a day. Practice a daily routine for a right-handed pool shooter: 125 right-hand strokes100 left-hand strokes30 left-hand strokes (from right side rail as when caught needing a mechanical bridge)30 left-hand strokes from rail next to left side pocket to other side pocket30 right-hand strokes from right side rail in place of using the bridge with a right-hand stroke27 right-hand strokes from left side rail in place of using the bridge with a right-hand stroke30 left-hand strokes from right side rail in place of using the bridge with a left-hand stroke25 left-hand strokes from left side rail in place of using the bridge with a left-hand stroke Stay with it, dear readers. You can become a sharpshooter and not just a pool shooter.