TheThaiger
Banned
I'm off to have an eye test soon - can the optician tell you which eye is dominant, or doesn't it work like that?
Any other ways of working it out?
Any other ways of working it out?
I really don't think it matters, Thaiger.
I think you should just look at things the best way you know how.
So when you're playing pool, bring the cue to your eyes, rather than
your eyes to the cue.
When I was young, I had a goatee for a while...that's how I found out
I was right-eyed....the cue would part my beard on the right side of my
chin.
But I didn't have to know that, I was seeing the shot the best way I
could already.
Joe Davis was extremely left-eyed.
Earl Strickland is extremely right-eyed.
I doubt they had to figure that out before they became great players.
I agree. It's somewhat trivial information. Something else to consider, your dominant eye isn't an constant thing. If an image appears on your right side, your right eye will focus on it. If an image appears on your left side, your left eye takes over. How it pertains to sports, specifically pool, is pretty simple. The object you are focusing on should always appear centered. It really doesn't matter which eye is responsible for it. The bottom line, very few (if any) professional pool players pay close attention to eye-dominance ever.
Don't over-think it.
I agree. It's somewhat trivial information. Something else to consider, your dominant eye isn't an constant thing. If an image appears on your right side, your right eye will focus on it. If an image appears on your left side, your left eye takes over. How it pertains to sports, specifically pool, is pretty simple. The object you are focusing on should always appear centered. It really doesn't matter which eye is responsible for it. The bottom line, very few (if any) professional pool players pay close attention to eye-dominance ever.
Don't over-think it.
It is my opinion that the dominant eye plays no particular role in executing the pool shot, but rather the subconscious mind sorts out all of the necessary information and accomplishes the task. :smile:
I agree. It's somewhat trivial information. Something else to consider, your dominant eye isn't an constant thing. If an image appears on your right side, your right eye will focus on it. If an image appears on your left side, your left eye takes over. How it pertains to sports, specifically pool, is pretty simple. The object you are focusing on should always appear centered. It really doesn't matter which eye is responsible for it. The bottom line, very few (if any) professional pool players pay close attention to eye-dominance ever.
Don't over-think it.
Thats definitely not true. When youre shooting a gun and aiming in a sight, you dont switch eyes depending if the deer is on your right or your left. The eye that you aim with is always the same because the eye that youre using to aim is your dominant eye. Have you ever seen John Morra shoot? He may not pay attention to it, but it is very apparent that his eye dominance is extreme.
Not over-thinking something is my forte. I still don't know if an optician can tell me which eye is dominant, however.
Not over-thinking something is my forte. I still don't know if an optician can tell me which eye is dominant, however.
I don't see how an optician could even tell. Typically the stronger eye is dominant and they can tell which eye is stronger but dominance is strictly how the brain processes this information. I have poor eye-sight and I see an optician often. I'm also cross-eyed dominant (fairly unusual for a righty) and equally unusual is that my dominant eye is my weaker eye (not by much).
The brain does a lot to build a complete picture. It fills in areas you're not focusing on and pretends to keep everything in focus when, in fact, the only thing that's actually IN FOCUS is what you're focusing on.
Just look at the object ball. That's all you can do.
Jude:
[*]Your optician can only tell you about eye damage, injury, disease, or defect -- NOT dominance. -Sean
I really don't think it matters, Thaiger.
I think you should just look at things the best way you know how.
So when you're playing pool, bring the cue to your eyes, rather than
your eyes to the cue.
When I was young, I had a goatee for a while...that's how I found out
I was right-eyed....the cue would part my beard on the right side of my
chin.
But I didn't have to know that, I was seeing the shot the best way I
could already.
Joe Davis was extremely left-eyed.
Earl Strickland is extremely right-eyed.
I doubt they had to figure that out before they became great players.
The optician checks ocular dominance by having me look at something then covering first one eye then the other with a paddle. When the dominant eye is covered, the object appears to move from the location it was at with both eyes uncovered or just the dominant eye uncovered.
Determining ocular dominance is a well understood process.
Jude:
I agree with all of your posts in this thread thus far.
-Sean
And i Add Jaffar 'Patch Eye' Basheer, is a pro road player, 80 years now still playing, used to have his both eyes and play like God, lost one eye to accident still play like God,see link
http://www.onepocket.org/PatchEyeInterview.htm