I noticed this quite a while back but didn’t make much of it and so I sort of just forgot about it, but it jumped out at me again while watching the World Cup of Pool. I think there’s been a significant change in the way the younger pros handle their warm-up strokes compared to how many of the older pros do it.
I don’t have any firm statistics on this but I think it’s a valid observation. Many of the younger pros simply do not take warm-up strokes in the traditional sense. Many of them instead spend this pre-trigger pulling time doing measuring strokes.
It’s sort of an interesting topic, well at least to me it is, but if you take two of the greatest Nine Ball players the world has ever known – Earl Strickland and Efren Reyes and you watch them you will see the traditional warm-up strokes. When I say traditional warm-up strokes, I’m referring to what closely resembles a full stroke with a long backswing and then a full forward swing right up to the cue ball. They both will do several of these types of warm-up strokes before pulling the trigger.
But when you watch many of the younger pros (too many to name) they really forego these types of warm-up strokes and instead spend their time doing what I call more of a measuring stroke. They just focus really intently on the precise location they are going to hit the cue ball and then they pull the trigger.
To this casual observer (apologies to The Casual Observer) it appears that the one type of stroke – the traditional warm-up stroke, is concerned with loosening up the shooting arm while the other type – the measuring stroke, doesn’t worry too much about the shooting arm and instead uses this time to focus on the cue ball alone.
What does all this mean? I’m not really sure but I know I was in a slump all summer long and I think I’m coming out of that now in part because I started paying closer attention to the cue ball and eliminated a lot of the unnecessary warm-up strokes. I guess only time will tell.
So are you more of a measurer or a warm-up stroker?
I don’t have any firm statistics on this but I think it’s a valid observation. Many of the younger pros simply do not take warm-up strokes in the traditional sense. Many of them instead spend this pre-trigger pulling time doing measuring strokes.
It’s sort of an interesting topic, well at least to me it is, but if you take two of the greatest Nine Ball players the world has ever known – Earl Strickland and Efren Reyes and you watch them you will see the traditional warm-up strokes. When I say traditional warm-up strokes, I’m referring to what closely resembles a full stroke with a long backswing and then a full forward swing right up to the cue ball. They both will do several of these types of warm-up strokes before pulling the trigger.
But when you watch many of the younger pros (too many to name) they really forego these types of warm-up strokes and instead spend their time doing what I call more of a measuring stroke. They just focus really intently on the precise location they are going to hit the cue ball and then they pull the trigger.
To this casual observer (apologies to The Casual Observer) it appears that the one type of stroke – the traditional warm-up stroke, is concerned with loosening up the shooting arm while the other type – the measuring stroke, doesn’t worry too much about the shooting arm and instead uses this time to focus on the cue ball alone.
What does all this mean? I’m not really sure but I know I was in a slump all summer long and I think I’m coming out of that now in part because I started paying closer attention to the cue ball and eliminated a lot of the unnecessary warm-up strokes. I guess only time will tell.
So are you more of a measurer or a warm-up stroker?
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