I remember hearing somewhere that Danny DiLiberto used a 14mm shaft originally, and was a great player with one, but when someone convinced him to switch to the 13mm or lower, his game elevated even more.
That's something I wrote. Danny played with a big shaft for years. Then one day he comes in and decides to sand down his shaft to a 12.5 on my lathe. He said and I quote that Lassiter used to say he could not see how players played with those fat shafts.
Danny did say later that it improved his game.
At the old Congress billiards in Miami golf on the 6 x12 was the big game. Rex Williams was in town and hung around for a while. He played some golf when he was there. Surprisingly he was world champion snooker player
But could not beat the golf players at the Congress. As you know golf tables have roll offs that have to be memorized.
Point is though, the players got fascinated with his snooker cues. It was not long before they were using these weird cues with the tiny tips playing golf.
I always found it interesting how billiard players hitting those big balls use those short cues with like 10 mm tips. I wonder what the physics of that is. I knew Bob Byrne. He in his books he shows playing pool with a billiard cue. I always thought that was a mistake and was giving the wrong info to the reader trying to learn pool.
Ray Schuler made me a cue once for pool. Unfortunately it had too many billiard aspects to it. From butt to shaft taper you could not play good pool with it.
Now we have CF that not too many years ago would have sounded ridiculous to players.
The game after a century plus from the first custom built cues is still evolving.
I remember seeing pictures of pool tables in old western photos from the eighteen hundreds. Could not imagine what it must have been like playing back then.
I don't know where I am going with this. I should just get out of bed and do something useful.