Anyone' game affected by apparel?

First, “Oldschool1478” mentions the principal hazard of clothing: catching the thumb of your stroking hand in your shirt front. Also, the pants pocket can be a hazard for the same reason.

Hats, or, more likely, caps I have always had the same reaction to as “Itsfroze.” How do you see the path to the pocket? Anyway, gentlemen do not wear headwear inside a building unless they are in an elevator or in a public area moving to an interior room, such as an office. (Source: Amy Vanderbilt, Complete Book of Etiquette, 1952 edition, illustrations by “Andrew Warhol” et al.).

As for shoes, you should practice in the same shoes you are going to play in, as “English” recommends. Perhaps this is incorrect, but I believe I read somewhere that Joe Procita had three pairs of shoes he practiced in and played pool in. He had two identical pairs of lace-up shoes, one pair brown and the other black. The two colors allowed him to have his shoes match his suit and trousers. His third pair was a pair of black formal shoes he could wear in tournaments when he had to wear a tuxedo. I believe the idea was to always have the same height at the table and hence the same angle of his eyes to the balls when he bent over. As “Dallas Hopps” points out, the idea is to have as much consistency as possible.

(I have also been told that Procita would move around from one pool room to another playing for only one week in each and usually not on the same table each day. He did not want to become too accustomed to one set of playing conditions and then wind up playing in a tournament where everything was new and unfamiliar. He trained himself constantly to adjust to varying playing conditions.)

Of course the shoes have to be appropriate to playing pool, not the great clodhoppers you see some guys wearing, as “Tashworth19191” and “LHP5” mention. Danny Harriman is an exception. He sometimes shows up wearing construction boots and shoots gorgeously, but for most people boots are a mistake.

I am grateful to “3andstop’s” suggestion about the coin or button in the shoe. If you believe in Galwey’s Self One and Self Two, it might be of value. I’ll try it.

As for bow ties, I spent most of my life in a tie and still enjoy wearing one, often a bow tie. Of course, I dress for myself and not for others. If I dress too far down, I feel uncomfortable. A golf shirt and chinos is the lower limit.

On the subject of sleeves, which “Altalien” raises, take a look at a three-cushion tournament from Europe. You’ll notice that a lot of the players roll the sleeve of their stroking arm up a bit. (Called, I think, “shooting” a cuff.) Also, a surprising number of them wear some kind of bracelet on their stroking arm. That would drive me nuts, but I think it may give them some extra sense of where their stroke is. I’m not sure snooker players do the same. I haven’t looked. I don’t like snooker, although I admire the skill of the players.

About vests and jackets, I’m not sure they aren’t an advantage rather than a hindrance. I think they tend to keep you stroking “within yourself,” as the golf and tennis guys would say. It’s hard to have a loopy stroke if you have a jacket on, although Cisero Murphy certainly managed it effectively even in a tuxedo. Of course, with all-ball fouls, that sleeve and the overhang can present a challenge.

And now I shall violate the principle that you should never “wise up a sucker” and give away a great pool secret. Buy a pair of suspenders. They are wonderful to play pool in. The motions of pool are such that it is as if they had been designed to pull your shirt out of your pants and let your pants slip down off your hips. With suspenders those two things don't happen nearly so much and you don’t get things clumped up around your waist. But remember that a gentleman does not let his suspenders be seen. Cover them with a sweater, a jacket or, in summer, a sweater vest.
 
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Funny thing

Evidently i become unbeatable when i play with no shirt on, because no one will play me under those conditions.

Slim
 
Is my game affected by apparel. Hm..

If the girl across from me is in a mini skirt has great legs and likes to wiggle, I have a tough time focusing.

Or did you mean MY apparel? Then yes, mostly shoes and socks if I was wearing them all day. If I was working and drove right to a tournament without changing into new socks and my sneakers, my feet tend to bug me a bit, I actually have to take my shoes off and relax for a bit if I can or I feel like I'll be playing a ball or two under my level.
 
My shoes got wet before league so I had to use my big winter boots. I managed to win more than I lost, but everything felt awkward and "off".For all I know it had nothing to do with boots. Anyone else ever affected by a change like that? Just curious.

Absolutely.

I can't wear:

Cowboy boots
Short Sleeve shirts where the sleeve is right at the elbow
A loose shirt in which my grip thumb can potentially get caught
Dickie denim jeans with the hammer loop
A leather vest


Freddie <~~~ swaying in the wind
 
I 'm surprised no one has mentioned hooking your grip hand thumb between
the buttons on your shirt. That one will foul my stroke often when I forget to
wear a pull-over, or a snug vest.

LOL!!! I didn't see this, but that's one I put down.
 
My shoes got wet before league so I had to use my big winter boots. I managed to win more than I lost, but everything felt awkward and "off".For all I know it had nothing to do with boots. Anyone else ever affected by a change like that? Just curious.

Do you mean like now that we have snow on the ground here in the great white north and the floor around the table is wet have I ever slipped stretching for a shot??:mad:
 
For me it's a short sleeve t-shirt or polo, or lightweight long sleeve t-shirt if it's cold, jeans, and my gold old converse Jack Purcells with thin socks. I had mentioned this before that a guy come into my room and plays in his bare feet. Works for him.
 
On the subject of sleeves, which “Altalien” raises, take a look at a three-cushion tournament from Europe. You’ll notice that a lot of the players roll the sleeve of their stroking arm up a bit. (Called, I think, “shooting” a cuff.)

'Shooting your cuffs' is when you are wearing long sleeve shirts and a suit or sport coat, and you fling both arms down and forward to free your shirt cuffs from binding at the coat sleeve openings. The shirt cuffs literally 'shoot' out of the coat and down around the wrists. The coat sleeve ends up halfway up the forearm.

Back when guys wore coats and long sleeves as a matter of casual wear to the billiard hall or ball game, shooting your cuffs was a sign that you were going to get serious and wear your opponent out. Stories tell that Greenleaf was a great one to shoot his cuffs, then crush his opponents with a devastating long run, if he could stand upright that long.

Of course, back in the day you were probably wearing shirts made with cuffs requiring cuff links, so yours were 24k gold, with diamonds or precious stones perhaps, so shooting your cuffs was a both a trumpet of doom for your opponent, and a flash for the railbirds to enjoy. Maybe, just maybe, your stroke felt freer with your cuffs unbound.

Next class: Shooting your mouth, followed by shooting yourself in the foot, shooting fish in a barrel, standing with arms akimbo, and other popular idioms. These may or may not be NPR, depending on if you just went off big time, choked for the cheese, made an easy score, or can't believe the bad roll you just got.
 
Only two things: I def prefer comfortable shoes if I will be playing for any length of time. Second thing is non-negotiable - NO SLEEVES! Sleeves are the biggest aherl move ever for me. Just can't and won't play in them. Everything else doesn't matter to me one way or the other.
 
Only in the Summer when I wear a Banana Hammock to the bar to play pool.

Chicks are like, they all wanna come around me to talk and such. Kinda gets in the way of my game.

Should come up to Canada in the Winter for League. Winter boots are in fashion.
 
I prefer to wear a short-sleeved shirt when I shoot pool. Ditto for bowling.

It really shouldn't make any difference, but I guess it's psychosomatic.
 
I have to wear either a t shirt, short sleeve polo, or short sleeve button up. I can't stand trying to play in anything long sleeve. If I am wearing a hat I tilt the hat up when shooting since it blocks a bit of my peripheral.
 
I am severely affected by the tight jeans and short skirts of females customers. Is that what you mean?
 
I can't think of a "sport" that would be less affected by clothing than pool....not even darts or horseshoes. Shuffleboard maybe?

Restrictive clothing is terrible for pool. Unless your stance is like massy or Minnesota fats and you don't lean down so far on your shot.
 
I 'm surprised no one has mentioned hooking your grip hand thumb between
the buttons on your shirt. That one will foul my stroke often when I forget to
wear a pull-over, or a snug vest.

I don't notice that with button up shirts so much, but any time i wear a sweatshirt with that pocket across the front for both hands, that gets me consistently.
 
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