I am not claiming that my training programs are the only way to practice but I do know that this training program has helped produces a number of Irish, European, Gulf and Asian snooker champions over the years.
Every good shot you play in a tournament depends on how much ground work, you have done on the practice table, because the harder you work at this game, the more you will get out of it.
Having a qualified snooker coach to monitor your game will help the player be more focused and be more successful.
I believe my training programs will help the players improve their training sessions by allowing them to set goals to reach the next level in the academy, and if you working hard on learning how to control yourself and improving your score power, cue action and cue ball control, you will become a more successful snooker player
In 2007 my snooker academy helped 16 year old Vinnie Muldoon become the Irish senior snooker champion and the fundamentals in the Academy Of Champions have all been fine tuned with Vinnie since he joined the academy aged 11 years old back in 2003.
in 2009 David Hogan became the first Irishman to win the European Snooker Championship and Jason Devaney became the first Irish Junior player to win the Junior Pot Black title in the Crucible in Sheffield.
Everyday around the world snooker players are practicing my routines and beating their personal records in each routine and this keeps the players focused.
Before you start to play consistently, you must first develop a good stance, bridge, learn proper cueing and be able to control the path of the cue ball whether it is full ball, half ball or the control of side, screw and stun.
Over the 20 years I have been coaching I have learnt every player have their own individual style of play and no two players are alike and if you go to www.pjnolanchampionsacademy.com you can download my training programs.
A full range of 20 different Academy Workbooks have now been designed to keep the players working hard on improving their overall game and you can download them all below.
The players are allowed a maximum of three attempts on the five routines and the highest score on each routine are recorded from that session onto the score sheet at the back of the workbook.
All the five routines top scores are then added together and this total identifies the players true academy level he achieved during that training session.
Players can also focus on a specific practice routine for a unlimited period in attempting to break an academy record.
Some academy routines you count the breaks, and other routines you count the number of balls you have potted, but in all of the routines the player must try and achieve higher scores during each training session.