
In the world of billiards, true knowledge is rare—but imitation is everywhere.
There are only a handful of real masters who have earned the right to teach this game. You’ll find their names on the tables, in tournament records, and in decades of dedication. But scroll through social media or Google “billiard course,” and you’ll see an army of copycats selling repackaged content—books, PDFs, videos—none of it original, and most of it useless.
Let’s be real: Most of these so-called “professionals” haven’t walked the walk. They’ve read someone else’s book, stitched together YouTube clips, and now they’re selling you what you could’ve found for free—if you just looked harder.
Here’s the truth:
You don’t need to spend $49.99 on a glorified Google Doc to become a better player.
You don’t need a five-hour course with dramatic music and recycled drills.
You need a cue, a table, and time.
You need to miss shots, analyze why, and miss again until it clicks.
You need to watch great players—not because they sell something, but because they live it.
On this site, I don’t sell courses. I don’t sell PDFs. I don’t pretend to be a coach.
What I offer is raw, real insight. Lessons from the chaos of the table. From wins, losses, instincts, and obsessions.
If I ever recommend something—it’s free, or it’s gear I use myself. If I ever share a guide, it’s because it helped me, not because it earns me money.
So don’t fall for the hustle.
Don’t buy what can’t be bought.
The best billiards player you can become is already inside you—waiting for the reps, not the downloads.
Keep your eyes sharp. Keep your mind sharper.
And above all—question anyone who sells you certainty in a game ruled by chaos.