Cue Ball Control: The Difference of a Beginner and a Shark Security Guard
The Beginner
Watches the pockets: Focused on the ball going in, misses what the cue ball does next.
Stands at the table: Plants themselves in one spot and waits for problems to arrive.
Reacts to arguments: Arrives after voices are raised, already on the back foot.
Checks the ball when asked: Only inspects the cue ball if a player complains about it.
The Shark
Watches the cue ball: Always tracking where the white ball lands, that's where the next move happens.
Moves with the game: Positions themselves to see disputes before they happen, always one step ahead.
Reads body language early: Spots tension at the table before a word is spoken, intervenes calmly.
Checks the ball routinely: Inspects at every table turnover; marks, weight, and size without being asked.
Position play: where you stand changes everything
In pool, every shot is really two shots: the one you're taking, and the one you're setting up. A beginner plays one shot at a time. A shark is always thinking about where the cue ball needs to be next. The same logic applies on the floor. A novice security guard responds to the table in front of them. A seasoned one is already standing at the right angle to see the next dispute coming; back to the wall, sightlines clear, close enough to intervene but far enough not to crowd the players.
Spin: applying the right amount of force
Beginners hit the cue ball center-mass every time; straightforward, predictable, easily read. Sharks apply English; a little top spin here, a touch of side there, adjusting their approach depending on the shot needed. For a security guard, this translates to calibrating your response to the situation. A friendly reminder about house rules is top spin, gentle, keeps things moving forward. Asking a player to leave is a firm stop shot. Knowing which to apply, and when, is the mark of a professional.
The scratch: knowing when you've lost control
Even the best players scratch occasionally, the cue ball drops in a pocket and control is handed to the other side. For a security guard, a scratch is when a situation escalates despite your best efforts. It happens. What separates a shark from a beginner isn't avoiding every scratch; it's recovering quickly, resetting position, and not letting one bad moment define the rest of the game. Know when to call for backup, reset the table, and take back control.
Developing your eye
You don't become a shark overnight in pool, and you don't become one on the floor overnight either. The skill is built through repetition; learning which players are high-risk, which tables attract hustlers, what a marked cue ball looks like, and how a tense game sounds different from a loud-but-friendly one. Spend time watching. Ask veteran staff what they look for. Study the game you're protecting, not just the room you're standing in.






