Over the past 2 nearly 3 months I've changed my stroke somewhat. More to the point I've changed what happens with my wrist. Previously my wrist stayed locked which helped with keeping my stroke straight but because I don't drop my elbow I really struggled when I needed to power through the CB. I had no option but to generate extra power with a snap of the wrist, but because I did it on the odd occasion it wasn't consistent so I started using it in every shot. Here is a quick run through what I do - hold the cue with a light grip between your thumb, index and middle finger and start the backward phase of the stroke by moving your wrist back first, then your forearm from the elbow joint then start the forward motion by moving your forearm forward first then your wrist should naturally move forward.
After the fist few weeks my stroke started to straighten out and up until last week I was trying to get used to speed control. Now the two have finally clicked and the results are crushing balls. I've been getting more spin, too. Well the same amount of spin but with less effort, and the Max amount of spin I can create has increased. Its added more shots to my arsenal. A shot came up where the 2 was 1ft away from the pocket, with only half the pocket available and the CB was about 6-7ft from the 2. I had to draw straight back to the bottom rail and come off the rail back up table and land 2ft away from the top rail. I failed. I got too much spin and the CB bounced off the top rail and landed middle table snookering me. Definitely a wtf moment.
I would urge anyone who doesn't have a 'wristy' stroke to experiment with it. Its helped me out, but it may not help you out. There is only 1 way to find out though.
So yeah - I've come to the conclusion that it doesn't matter if you can curl 100lbs, wrestle a bear that's just been castrated or drink protein shakes until it flows out of your nose - the movement in the wrist is a major part, if not the biggest part of a truely powerful stroke.
After the fist few weeks my stroke started to straighten out and up until last week I was trying to get used to speed control. Now the two have finally clicked and the results are crushing balls. I've been getting more spin, too. Well the same amount of spin but with less effort, and the Max amount of spin I can create has increased. Its added more shots to my arsenal. A shot came up where the 2 was 1ft away from the pocket, with only half the pocket available and the CB was about 6-7ft from the 2. I had to draw straight back to the bottom rail and come off the rail back up table and land 2ft away from the top rail. I failed. I got too much spin and the CB bounced off the top rail and landed middle table snookering me. Definitely a wtf moment.
I would urge anyone who doesn't have a 'wristy' stroke to experiment with it. Its helped me out, but it may not help you out. There is only 1 way to find out though.
So yeah - I've come to the conclusion that it doesn't matter if you can curl 100lbs, wrestle a bear that's just been castrated or drink protein shakes until it flows out of your nose - the movement in the wrist is a major part, if not the biggest part of a truely powerful stroke.