phreaticus
Well-known member
Thx. Again, who am I to debate Dr. Dave, but I disagree. I’m of the pursuasion that building awareness of vision center is the best & most critical first step, and developing ones stance using proprioceptive indexes while remaining as “square” as possible to a reference shotline is a much better approach, starting from feet up. There are obviously many ways to skin a cat, and they can all can work great - but connecting our visualization methods & stance to objective visual references in a manner that is most consistent with how our innate binocular visual processing system works & the bipedal bio mechanical processes that humans do since birth, are likely to yield more consistent results. I’ve given much time to exploring many approaches, including yours, those of several pro pool/snooker instructors and found best success by investing non trivial time to develop a stance that stays square as possible to the shotline by aligning stance during PSR and approach to one of two visual references of the CB/OB - CTC & CTE. All shots in pool can be thought of as minor angular offsets (ball and tip fractions) from these two primary visual references. This is essentially what CJ teaches & seems to take much flak for. The CTE cult touches into some similar visualization stuff but IMO have gone way off into the weeds…The first step is to find your "personal best stance" per the info and demos here:
Then, while in your personal best stance, shifting the upper body back and forth with the cue aligned straight can help you easily identify your "vision center" head position.
And then, if your stroke mechanics are good, you might actually shoot the shot straight.
You're welcome. I aim to swerve.![]()
Ideally we would be like perfectly symmetrical robots and simply square up to the shotline, aim a laser pointer thru it & drop perfectly squarely down onto it, and poke our stick thru it. Ie pool stick just come out of center mass. But, we have eye dominance issues and we have to create clearance for the cue butt to clear our hips once down on a shot. Most do this (consciously or subconsciously) by blading their upper bodies towards their dominant side - this can lead to minor deviation in our visual perception between PSR & delivery - since most folks will not have a consistent, natural way to establish same offset during PSR, nor will they be able to blade torso while keeping head/eyes perfectly square as they drop in. This leads to (minor or major) conscious/subconscious twisting of torso, head, arm, wrist to “correct” or match what they saw & aimed at during PSR.
It can obviously be made to work, but some (me included) think that a better approach is to build a stance square around visual center using feet/hips - and maintain same vertical axis for entire torso/head - by essentially aiming with your eyes/feet in PSR, and pushing hips straight back during drop in, vs “bending over”.
Establishing ones best stance without first being aware of ones visual center and using objective visual references & physical indexes that one can actually see/feel such as centers/edges of the balls and heels of our feet - vs guessing at sub mm contact points, invisible ghost balls or imaginary shot lines - is IMHO a much less consistent approach. Similar approaches are taught in other activities; I mentioned shooting which is probably the most obvious parallel, but snow skiing is another activity that I draw on that teaches similar concepts (square downhill hips/head/eyes thru turns), but I think archery and most martial arts have related concepts.
I’m aware that all this bucks some conventional approaches in pool and may seem weird. Just sharing, not arguing


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