The Big Road is the main visual diary of the shoe. It does not care about exact hand totals. It cares about who won each resolved hand and how those wins stack into columns. If you learn to read the Big Road first, every other road becomes easier to understand.
Think of the Big Road as the shoe's skeleton. It shows whether the table is building long vertical runs, short alternating turns, or awkward stop-start movement.
| Pattern | What it suggests | What to avoid assuming |
|---|---|---|
| Long vertical columns | The shoe may be expressing continuation and rhythm more clearly. | Do not assume every streak is automatically strong forever. |
| Many short columns | The shoe may be alternating or failing to commit to one personality. | Do not force a "trend" label onto a board that keeps changing shape. |
| Clean repeating geometry | The road may be producing a structure that derivative roads can evaluate more clearly. | Do not ignore pace, phase, and recent turns. |
| Messy uneven turns | The board may be in transition or low-trust territory. | Do not mistake activity for clarity. |