The Great Experiment Begins

jay helfert

Shoot Pool, not people
Gold Member
Silver Member
All these years I've been espousing the advantages of being able to play opposite handed, particularly to younger players. My typical spiel is for them to practice 30 minutes a day and they will learn quickly, much faster than they did with their natural hand. Best of all they will be better pool players for it. This I truly believed to be true, evidenced by great switch hitters like Buddy Hall, Mike Sigel and Keith McCready.

Well, I'm here to tell you that it's all just a theory of mine, I'm a big hypocrite! I can't play opposite handed and never could. Back in the day when I was gambling, we used to be able to stipulate prior to starting a match, "get up on the table," meaning you didn't have to keep one foot on the floor. That way I never had to switch hands, just crawl up on the table and shoot. Even great players like Boston Shorty (who was only 5'2") would make this stipulation before a big money game, and he was virtually unbeatable with this rule in effect.

So I've decided to test my own theory. I will practice 30 minutes a day left handed (not every day, but every day that I practice), and see how I do after one month of this. Today is day two in this experiment, and let me tell you it's like learning how to play pool all over again. From scratch! I'm starting to remember all the agony of learning how to play this game all those years ago. The endless days and nights just hitting balls, trying to figure things out. I was no natural at pool, it took me a good year just to be able to make balls with regularity. Two more years to learn how to control the cue ball and develop a stroke. And I'm talking three years of pool all day every day. I was definitely addicted back then!

So yesterday on my first day I felt helpless! I was miscuing, missing hangers and generally being totally inept. I was a rank beginner all over again. In a way it was cool to harken back to my youth and all of my inadequacies then. Here I was starting over at pool after five decades. I literally couldn't make a ball, mainly because I had zero stroke. The cue felt awkward and uncomfortable, just like you see with people who are brand new to the game. It was one of the longest 30 minutes of my life. UGH, I was terrible. I made a few short shots and began to hit a few more balls, simply out of concentration (and frustration).

Today was day two, and lo and behold, I could make a ball here and there. I found that a very short little push stroke was beginning to work for me. At least I could guide the cue in somewhat the right direction. I actually began to make a lot of short shots, like maybe two diamonds from the pocket with the cue ball close to the object ball. I had improved minimally. But not all that much. I still had no chance on any shot longer than half table and zero chance of stretching for a ball. And even on short shots, I was just as likely to miss as make it. But I was making some of them and miscuing far less. There was some improvement after only two days, so for that I was encouraged. I'll keep you posted how this goes. Lefty Jay :eek:
 
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Fountains & Frustrations galore

It sounds like Jay found the fountain of HIS youth. You going to start selling sandwiches again as well?.......:thumbup:

It can certainly put things into perspective to just how much an advanced player takes for granted. Good luck with south pawing it, and do keep us posted on your progress. You're much braver than I.


Dopc.


All these years I've been espousing the advantages of being able to play opposite handed, particularly to younger players. My typical spiel is for them to practice 30 minutes a day and they will learn quickly, much faster than they did with their natural hand.

Well, I'm here to tell you that it's all just a theory of mine, I'm a big hypocrite! I can't play opposite handed and never could. Back in the day when I was gambling, we used to be able to stipulate prior to starting a match, "get up on the table," meaning you didn't have to keep one foot on the floor. That way I never had to switch hands, just crawl up on the table and shoot. Even great players like Boston Shorty (who was only 5'2") would make this stipulation before a big money game, and he was virtually unbeatable with this rule in effect.

So I've decided to test my own theory. I will practice 30 minutes a day left handed (not every day, but every day that I practice), and see how I do after one month of this. Today is day two in this experiment and let me tell you, it's like learning how to play pool all over again. From scratch! I'm starting to remember all the agony of learning how to play this game all those years ago. The endless days and nights just hitting balls, trying to figure things out. I was no natural at pool, it took me a good year just to be able to make balls with regularity. Two more years to learn how to control the cue ball and develop a stroke. And I'm talking three years of pool all day every day. I was definitely addicted back then!
 
And to make matters worse, you will have some sore muscles tomorrow. From playing pool a half hour? Yup!!

JC
 
There are some theories that doing things opposite handed, actually grows new brain cells, and increases your eye-hand coordination, to include your dominant side. No lie.
 
There are some theories that doing things opposite handed, actually grows new brain cells, and increases your eye-hand coordination, to include your dominant side. No lie.

I like that. All I've done for the last 40 years is kill my brain cells! :D
 
Jay I won't ask you to post videos of you using it but those gimmick shake weights actually work to build muscle memory since you are not able to put in sessions everyday... Just find a surface similar to the height of the table put your bridge hand down with weight on it and spend as much time as you can holding the shake weight like a pool cue and vigorously taking it back and forth without a pause so it does what it needs to do....

Things have been tough in Knoxvegas and my time at the table is almost zero... I was tired of losing ground on long breaks and started using the shake weight every other day and a long layoff doesn't hurt near as bad as it used to... Been over a month since I got to the table Saturday and I had no problem with running a few full rotation racks out in the 2 hours I got to put in....... The old adage of use it or lose it comes into play... Just changing how you use it....

And no it's not a joke... There was plenty of fodder on harkening back to your youth... You know back when you would pull on your hai.... err your toupee in frustration...... You do know Freddy swears you had that rug when you were 20?????

:D Chris
 
I like that. All I've done for the last 40 years is kill my brain cells! :D

Yeah, well some of us are better at killing our brain cells than others.;)

I wish you luck, I try to shoot alternate hand on shots as well. Ive been doing it for a while, so Im about 70% of what my dominant hand can do.

Cheers!
 
I'm always telling myself that I should do this! You've inspired me, Jay. I'll give it a go, but not for 30 minutes. I think I'm more comfortable with 15.
 
All these years I've been espousing the advantages of being able to play opposite handed, particularly to younger players. My typical spiel is for them to practice 30 minutes a day and they will learn quickly, much faster than they did with their natural hand. Best of all they will be better pool players for it. This I truly believed to be true, evidenced by great switch hitters like Buddy Hall, Mike Sigel and Keith McCready.

Well, I'm here to tell you that it's all just a theory of mine, I'm a big hypocrite! I can't play opposite handed and never could. Back in the day when I was gambling, we used to be able to stipulate prior to starting a match, "get up on the table," meaning you didn't have to keep one foot on the floor. That way I never had to switch hands, just crawl up on the table and shoot. Even great players like Boston Shorty (who was only 5'2") would make this stipulation before a big money game, and he was virtually unbeatable with this rule in effect.

So I've decided to test my own theory. I will practice 30 minutes a day left handed (not every day, but every day that I practice), and see how I do after one month of this. Today is day two in this experiment, and let me tell you it's like learning how to play pool all over again. From scratch! I'm starting to remember all the agony of learning how to play this game all those years ago. The endless days and nights just hitting balls, trying to figure things out. I was no natural at pool, it took me a good year just to be able to make balls with regularity. Two more years to learn how to control the cue ball and develop a stroke. And I'm talking three years of pool all day every day. I was definitely addicted back then!

So yesterday on my first day I felt helpless! I was miscuing, missing hangers and generally being totally inept. I was a rank beginner all over again. In a way it was cool to harken back to my youth and all of my inadequacies then. Here I was starting over at pool after five decades. I literally couldn't make a ball, mainly because I had zero stroke. The cue felt awkward and uncomfortable, just like you see with people who are brand new to the game. It was one of the longest 30 minutes of my life. UGH, I was terrible. I made a few short shots and began to hit a few more balls, simply out of concentration (and frustration).

Today was day two, and lo and behold, I could make a ball here and there. I found that a very short little push stroke was beginning to work for me. At least I could guide the cue in somewhat the right direction. I actually began to make a lot of short shots, like maybe two diamonds from the pocket with the cue ball close to the object ball. I had improved minimally. But not all that much. I still had no chance on any shot longer than half table and zero chance of stretching for a ball. And even on short shots, I was just as likely to miss as make it. But I was making some of them and miscuing far less. There was some improvement after only two days, so for that I was encouraged. I'll keep you posted how this goes. Lefty Jay :eek:


Good luck with the experiment, Jay.

My amphibious experience over the years has been that I have taught myself to shoot opposite handed all those shots that I can't reach with my natural side and I'm now pretty good at all those. But I can't make any other shots lefty -- only the ones I can't reach with my right paw. You could put a baby straight-in to the side pocket out in the middle of the table and I couldn't make it. It's a funny thing.

Lou Figueroa
 
I learned to play left handed in high school. The thing that was the hardest for me was getting my bridge comfortable and stable. Once I got that down, I got to be pretty good playing lefty.
 
The way I taught myself to play left handed was that I decided over a decade ago that every time a lefthanded shot opportunity would come up I would shoot it regardless of the situation or consequences. Never really dedicated practice per se, but over time it's definitely made me competent at least with my opposite hand.
 
Wish I had too

Jay...good for you.

For myself, I only shoot hangers opposite handed.

I have tried to work on it, but, never committed to adding it to the arsenal.

It has seemed too foreign.

I can't stroke straight or smoothly. I can't bridge, especially a closed bridge. The shot doesn't look right...dominant eye now on wrong side of head. No speed control. No draw. No extreme english.

I have just learned to use the bridge instead.


Jay, hopefully we will hear you saying 'for the cash..left handed' before long.

When you get this figured out...maybe document the process and write an instructional article or mini-book. :grin:
 
There are some theories that doing things opposite handed, actually grows new brain cells, and increases your eye-hand coordination, to include your dominant side. No lie.

Years ago, I used to teach adult computer training. Not wanting to stand in front of the board as I wrote, I learnt to write with my opposite hand.

To this day, I can write, as well so you cannot tell the difference, with either hand - but only on a chalk or other upright board.

I cannot for the life of me do it on pen or paper..

Weird!
 
I have found that to get new people to play pool I offer to play them left handed.
I give them an equalizer and its fun and I get better at lefty each time
 
i learned to play off handed years ago. I ran a pool room in a small town and was running out of customers right handed. So on slow days I practiced playing left handed. Probably got to a 70% proficiency left handed. That was 40 years ago but I still play good enough leftie to make balls and play adequate position. This can be very advantageous at times. Worth the effort in my opinion.
 
It will help if you also practice writing left-handed. The smaller motions of writing build into the larger motion of cuing. Eating left-handed helps too since eating is a basic human need.

I don't recommend developing your left-hand the way I did: break your right arm.
 
Jay, you're probably going to find that playing left-handed is also going to improve your right-handed play. I think it's because the awkward frustration brought on by the left-handed practice makes the right-handed play feel so natural and comfortable that it is easy to fall into stroke. At least, that's been my personal experience.

Roger
 
Best of luck with your experiment, Jay. You're right, it's like learning the game all over again -- at least it was for me. Keep at it and it will click in eventually.

I could never play a lick left-handed until a couple years ago, when the regulars at my neighborhood bar started insisting that I play off-handed to make the games more fair. At first, like you, I couldn't even make the hangers. I found that I really had to concentrate on the fundamentals of my stance, stroke and alignment.

But the one thing that helped the most was when I realized I had to realign my eyes over the cue. I'm very right-eye dominant, and when I just tried to be a left-handed mirror image of my right-handed self, my eyes were way out of alignment with how I normally sighted. When I stood up straighter in my stance and shifted my head to the other side of the cue, I started making balls with much higher consistency.

Now it's not unusual for me to break and run a rack of 8 ball on the barbox left-handed. I still don't have the big power stroke, but can execute most simple spin and draw shots. And when I play right-handed, I rarely need to use the bridge.

Keep at it, you'll be glad you did. I look forward to reading your progress reports.
 
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