A Test Idea
I'd like to see the following test trialled.
Have a relatively difficult pot set up with bridge in place and balls on exact markers. Have the vision of the OB blocked so that the player can only see the bridge and the CB.
Have players of various abilities make 10-20 attempts at hitting the CB dead center. Measure their pot accuracy. A measure of their stroke accuracy.
Then have the same players line up the shot. A dot on the shaft at the bridge point determines their bridge position and hence aim line. (Wouldn't matter much if the dot was not exactly at their bridge point, so long as the shaft was lined up relatively close to the CB center). That position is compared to the set bridge line through the center of the CB. An overhead camera with a gridded glass plate could be used to establish the dot position with considerable accuracy.
A bit of simple math and we can determine how accurately these players can actually align to the shot.
This kind of test could provide a lot of information about the relative accuracies of aiming and stroking and how that might change according to player levels.
Colin
I'd like to see the following test trialled.
Have a relatively difficult pot set up with bridge in place and balls on exact markers. Have the vision of the OB blocked so that the player can only see the bridge and the CB.
Have players of various abilities make 10-20 attempts at hitting the CB dead center. Measure their pot accuracy. A measure of their stroke accuracy.
Then have the same players line up the shot. A dot on the shaft at the bridge point determines their bridge position and hence aim line. (Wouldn't matter much if the dot was not exactly at their bridge point, so long as the shaft was lined up relatively close to the CB center). That position is compared to the set bridge line through the center of the CB. An overhead camera with a gridded glass plate could be used to establish the dot position with considerable accuracy.
A bit of simple math and we can determine how accurately these players can actually align to the shot.
This kind of test could provide a lot of information about the relative accuracies of aiming and stroking and how that might change according to player levels.
Colin