I think the snooker stroke was developed around the snooker cue. That obnoxious taper keeps the tip from dipping as the hand rises.
Nah. Joe Davis defined the snooker stroke. Read his books. He is why nearly all snooker players have a piston stroke.I think the snooker stroke was developed around the snooker cue. That obnoxious taper keeps the tip from dipping as the hand rises.
for me the "piston "stroke is a whole another animal regarding elbow movementI’d have to say I don’t agree with that statement. I guess it depends on what degree of elbow movement you are considering as an elbow drop (piston) stroke as opposed to a pendulum (elbow remaining relatively stationary) stroke. Some are way more extreme than others.
Do a search for a 2019 thread titled “Ultimate Argument: Pendulum vs Piston Stroke”. It will save you having to wait for responses and opinions, as there are 196 posts in that thread.
I thought I was the only one! I recently had to put a bandaid on to keep practicing... I was working on big draw shots.Anyone else whack their nipple sometimes when hitting it hard? Damn that hurts.
The aforementioned teacher tells his students over and over to have a "soft" shoulder. They tell him it is ..... he feels it and tells them it isn't. LOL Cuz it 'isn't'. I feel that the shoulder plays a huge part in not only the "full swing" (for the break) but pretty much all shots. A good idea (especially when when under pressure) is to loosen it up by "full swinging" as part one's PSR.When I read "full arm swing" I started to imagine how horrible that stroke would be. However for actual elbow drop (as in a lowering) to occur. You must be pivoting your upper arm at the shoulder. Which would equate to "full arm swing".
All that said, I'm sure nearly no one places any focus on a "full arm swing" (excluding some breaks) that which would include the shoulder. It's simply the byproduct of momentum.
If the upper arm has not moved, has the shoulder played a part? If the upper arm does not drop until after tip/ball contact, has the shoulder played any significant role in the shot?... I feel that the shoulder plays a huge part in not only the "full swing" (for the break) but pretty much all shots. ..
It helped me when a coach said to just keep your shoulder stationary during the stroke.If the upper arm has not moved, has the shoulder played a part? If the upper arm does not drop until after tip/ball contact, has the shoulder played any significant role in the shot?
I never thought about it from that perspective. If there is no shoulder rotation, there certainly can’t be any elbow drop.It helped me when a coach said to just keep your shoulder stationary during the stroke.
SPF… knuckle to nippleAnyone else whack their nipple sometimes when hitting it hard? Damn that hurts.
An elbow drop would be a flaw In your fundamentals. I’m surely not going to miss aim a straight in shot so if I miss it it’s going to be a break down in fundamentals. . I don’t care how good you think you are or how amazing you think your fundamentals are your not a robot. I’ve watched the best players In the world have fundamental break downs and miss shots and since I’m pretty sure your no where near an 800 Fargo or I bet even a 700 your not one of them so I’m sure you do to.Exactly. Yet another way to blame elbow drop for missing or bad fundamentals.
Here's your comment about "Hunter's" stroke, Bob.If the upper arm has not moved, has the shoulder played a part? If the upper arm does not drop until after tip/ball contact, has the shoulder played any significant role in the shot?
True story: in college, I just about wrecked my car due to nipple pain.I thought I was the only one! I recently had to put a bandaid on to keep practicing... I was working on big draw shots.
Again, you have to look at when the elbow drops. Before or after contact? The timing is important.Unless a pendulum stroke is natural
To you - it takes hundreds and hundreds of hours or more to develop a pure pendulum stroke as a conversion from an established elbow drop stroke - ask anyone who tried it and truly succeeded. I am talking hours that are devoted only to stroke conversion - not worth the effort IMO
Which came first, the taper or the stroke?Nah. Joe Davis defined the snooker stroke. Read his books. He is why nearly all snooker players have a piston stroke.
Well before of course.. lol if it was after it wouldn’t be a problem lolAgain, you have to look at when the elbow drops. Before or after contact? The timing is important.
I think the basic problem with elbow drop before impact is that the tip will contact the cue in a different place than it was at setup. Generally the tip will make impact higher than it was at setup. I think this is why some pros with early elbow drop set up with their tips lower than they want it to be at impact. In theory, if someone could match elbow rise in backswing with the same amount of elbow drop by impact, they would hit the same contact point as at address. Either way, an early elbow drop probably requires a lot of natural talent and practice to be precise with tip contact point.Well before of course.. lol if it was after it wouldn’t be a problem lol