**Opinion**
You wouldn't want a short bridge with the cue gripped way back, or a long bridge holdind up higher, that would just look funny.
**Opinion**
Carl Bekowitz
But... Mosconi said a few inches behind the balance.
I open bridge on most shots and I hold the cue further back so that the shaft doesn't lift during my stroke...but then again that's just me.:smile:
CORY: I know to each their own....BUT....This is a false statement:
"Grip/hand placementis more about the balance point of the cue."
SPF=randyg
I'll take a shot at this, then expand on it to fit the OP.
Basically what this is saying, and correctly so, is that the cue's balance point does NOT change in relation to your hand placement.
By that I mean that if a cue balances at 19" from the butt cap, then it does so regardless of whether you grip the cue at the butt cap or in the middle of the wrap.
What changes is the mechanics, and thus the feel of the cue during the stroke. By mechanics, I mean your length of stroke, follow through, etc. By feel, I just mean that if, for example, a cue feels a little butt heavy when held towards the middle of the wrap, it will feel *less* butt heavy if you grip it at the butt cap. This is because more (or in this case ALL) of the butt is now in front of your hand and is being "Pushed".
Now back to the original question and how this applies - I think that this just shows that what feels right to you, probably IS right for you!
I've never seen anyone using a "slip stroke". I will always believe it's a figment of peoples imagination if they think they see or do it themselves.I didn't want to derail the thread this was posted in but I've been wanting to ask about this, seems like a good time.
Quote from Bob's post in another thread:
Many snooker players -- who earn far more than pool players, on average at the top -- grip their sticks all the way at the end; they have no room to slip. Nearly every top carom player uses a rubber grip; their hands do not slip even with light grips.(end quote)
I shot like this most of the time I played every day, my grip hand very near the buttcap or on it. I have a fair amount of wingspan and this is where the grip hand naturally wanted to be it seemed. With my return to pool and desire to learn "the right way to play" I moved my grip hand forward to a more common grip. The last few times I played I have let my grip hand wander wherever it wanted to. Near the buttcap for most shots, moving ahead for soft shots needing a lot of touch. Been a few years since I changed to the forward grip and I may be getting the "any change effect" but I seem to be pocketing a little better. I'm left wondering, what are the advantages and disadvantages of gripping near the back of the stick?
Hu
I've never seen anyone using a "slip stroke". I will always believe it's a figment of peoples imagination if they think they see or do it themselves.
CORY: I know to each their own....BUT....This is a false statement:
"Grip/hand placementis more about the balance point of the cue."
SPF=randyg
I do not think this is vague at all! I also agree 100%
As has already been said, you should grip your cue so that your arm is perpendicular to the floor when the cue tip is at the cue ball. This will be determined by your wingspan and the length of your bridge. The balance of the cue will have ZERO effect on this.
Quick question to those in this camp- After playing with your cue for many years and developing your specific mechanics including bridge length and grip placement. do you throw all that out the window if someone hands you a different cue? Seriously, let's say you left your cue at home ( or you have a tip pop off, etc) do you now find the balnace point and completley change your grip placement for this new cue? What about your bridge length, do you change that too? After drilling in your mechanics and practicing them to become automatic and repeatable, do you let a cue dictate how you will play? Does this seem like a good idea?
I am well aware that mosconi as well as others have stated to grip at or about the balance point. Some great players have also used a side arm stroke ( usually as a result of learning the game at a young age), should you do this?
How would you feel if you go to your doctor and he makes it known that he learned all he needed to know about the medical profession from the available information in 1945? Let's be honest here for a minute. Many things, including pool instruction, have come a long way in the last 40 years or so. That is what Randy was saying ( in far less words than I) in his comment about what the new books might say.
You can ALWAYS find examples of very good or great players who have some quirks or even what some would consider bad mechanics. Does this mean that we should TEACH this as the correct way? USUALLY when advice is asked for, it is in the context of what is the BEST or most efficient way to achieve X.
I have never heard someone ask "If I wanted to practice very hard and overcome certain mechanical errors and compensate for less than ideal fundamentals, How should I do....":grin:
The fact remains that MANY players even great ones learned very informally and made certain characteristics their own and still have achieved a great level. They play great pool IN SPITE of their mechanics, not because of them! They have still put in enough time to hone their game and have a very repeatable and consistant stroke, but that DOES NOT mean it is how someone who is seeking the correct and most efficient way to do things should be encouraged to do them.
Well, I think I have more or less said EXACTLY what Randy said. He was able to do it in far less words than I. It seemed like for some, it was not clear enough, or wanted to have a much longer explanation. I think this is long enough, yes?
poolpro<---------- rarely at a loss for words.:thumbup:
Jw
Left everything you said in there since it is all true enough except with one little caveat. Chances are that a player's cue was originally selected because the balance point suited his bridge and grip lengths or that his bridge and grip lengths were originally influenced by the balance point of his cue or the house cues he played with before owning a cue.
Minor differences in balance points mean little particularly if you already grip the cue a significant distance from the balance point on shots where the cue ball location lets you choose bridge length and grip point. I think we have all tried to play with a badly out of balance cue at one time or another and know how bad that stinks though!
Hu
Thanks for the reply.
I am not going to disagree with your basic point. Obviously how a cue feels in your hand will affect your decision to buy/play with it. I personally believe that a cue's balance is a very important factor of it's feel. Assuming I am actually able to try out a cue before buying it, I rarely even ask what the weight is, I am more concerned with how it feels in my hand. A large part of that is how it is balanced. Two cues can have the exact same overall weight, but one will feel lighter than the other one.
As far as cue charactristics, there is the "hit" which is how it feels at the moment of contact- which is mostly what kind of feedback get transmitted to your hand. Then there is how the cue feels in your hand the rest of the time ( meaning every moment that you are NOT contacting the ball). Balance is prob one of the biggest factors here. Sometimes I will LOVE the hit of a cue, but not care for the way it feels in my hand, and sometimes the opposite is true! I evaluate cues separately on these points, then take the cue as a whole.
However, the rest of my post dealt with the genral ideas that " so and so does it this way, Are you going to tell me he is wrong? He is a top player.." etc. etc. I hear this kind of talk all the time and I do not feel it is a fair argument at all. Assuming you have the same amount of talent, time invested , experience, and work ethic of that player, then YES you absolutely CAN do it just like that and have great results! Then there are the rest of us! Time is better spent without having to overcome obstacles and bad habits ( especially self imposed ones!) and being able to focus on other more productive aspects of the game. In other words... this game is hard enough, why do you want to make it more challenging?
Besides, for every anomaly of a top player, there are 20 or more with textbook ( or damn close) fundamentals. So by the same logic, if showing ONE player is proof of a less than ideal form as acceptable, than there is 20 times the proof AGAINST it! You do not get to ignore a mountain of evidence and focus on a single rock to prove your point.
I will say one more thing though. I feel that saying a cue should dictate where you grip it, to me, is like saying that the shoes you wear should dictate what your proper stance should be! Different footwear will have different "feels" and even heights! Could you imagine someone making a comment about someone's stance and replying " Well, I AM wearing Nike's, and as everyone knows they use a 3/8" foam padding. So I adjust my stance accordingly to compensate for that difference."
I am not going to agree with that kind of thinking. If everyone is happy with letting their cue tell them what proper fundamentals are, that is fine. I just will not be going over to that camp.
Jw
Apologies for the late post to a thread that may have run its course (over recent weeks I have not been able to give this forum the attention it deserves); but I think that there is one point that is still worth making.
Hu – I would not be surprised if consciously changing your grip position has had a negative impact on your game. For someone of your experience, surely the best approach is to first get happy with the other parts of your stance, alignment etc and then and then let the hand grip the cue where it wants. To do anything else is to let the tail wag the dog.
IMHO for any individual, the optimum position of the grip hand will primarily depend on three factors:
The length of the bridge;
The length of the cue;
The stance.
There are other influences, eg whether at the ’set’ position your forearm is vertical or slightly in front of vertical; whether your wrist is held straight down or perhaps cocked slightly forward. But the effect of these is usually relatively minor.
The influence of bridge length and cue length have been covered earlier in the thread; but the influence of the stance has not. And while the reason why snooker players tend to hold the cue further back is partly their longer bridge (generally preferred on the bigger tables, and partly their shorter cue (usual length 57”-58”), the typical snooker stance also plays a big part.
The reason why stance is so important is that there can be a huge effect on effective ‘wing span’ coming from how much you push the shoulder of your bridging arm forwards, the shoulder of your cuing arm back, and from how much you rotate your collar bone relative to the line of the shot.
To illustrate the effect of this twisting and stretching, I remember the snooker player Steve Davis once saying that when he stands up and holds both his arms out straight in front of him, after years of playing snooker the bridging arm reaches a good 2 inches further than the cuing arm.
It is also very noticeable that if you watch novice snooker players who imitate more experienced players by getting down low on the shot and holding the cue near the end, you will see that their cuing arm is way back from the vertical. This is because they have not yet started to twist their upper body in the way that more seasoned players have become accustomed to. Again this illustrates the relationship between body position and where you grip the cue.
So assuming that you have reasonably good fundamentals, changing your grip position is likely to either result in your forearm rest position changing or in your stance / alignment changing. I said earlier, I think that this is the tail wagging the dog, and quite likely to give an overall negative effect.
Actually this is a particular case of a general phenomenon that I have found makes the analysis of the billiard stroke very complicated – and often very controversial. This is that different parts of the technique are interconnected. In many cases if you change one thing, you affect something else. What’s more the interconnectedness of seemingly distinct components is sometimes not at all obvious. But that is probably a subject for another thread.
m. I watched a little video BlackJack sent me over and over for thirty minutes or more of a player using a slip stroke, it just seemed like magic. As noted, I have played with it and I had a local shortstop trying it when he passed by my table while I was playing with it.
Hu,
The man in that video was the late great Pat Howey, aka poolshark52. If you would like, I can send you more video - Pat was a pleasure to watch, a pleasure to talk to, and a pleasure to play with.
Pat Howey - Side Pocket Break
Where my grip hand is on the cue is dependant upon the type of shot I'm hitting, my bridge length for the shot selected, and the power I want to hit it with. On delicate shots that demand exact precision, and follow shots, I bridge closer to the CB and "choke up" on the cue, with my hand at nearly the top of the wrap. I tend to use a medium length bridge with a medium length grip (middle of the wrap) for most shots. For shots I need to hit harder (usually draw, table-length draw/stop/kill, and breaks), I'll use a longer bridge and adjust my grip to the bottom of the wrap.
That's just what I do, but my forearm/elbow is generally at 90 degrees on impact. I personally like to finish my stroke tip down on almost all shots except follows.
I also use an open bridge on almost all my shots except shots hit below center and sometimes shots with extreme english. But that also depends on the power I put into the stroke. I tend to stroke soft, so I love the open bridge, but on shots hit hard I use a closed bridge (which are usually draw shots). On the break I use a rail bridge regardless of the game. I'll give up 6-12 inches from headstring in exchange for the stability of the rail bridge, even breaking 8 ball on the big tables. That could be because I have small hands though.