Don't think so. See this shot played wrong so many times its unreal.Jeez, Diamond Dave could take a few tips from that video title. Way to make assumptions about your audience Mr. Boyes. Maybe you’re the one playing playing it incorrectly.
I think he didn't choose a very good example, especially because it required him to elevate.... Am I reading this incorrectly? Does this really change the cue speed you can use enough to justify elevation?
in oklahoma its just 'killin it'. great shot to have.We shoot that shot a lot on big snooker tables on very long shots, but hitting it below center ball. It allows us to hit long shots firmer to hold the line better, the pick up table roll just before contact to hold the cue ball from much forward roll. I know the brits do the same thing on that heavy nap directional cloth.
What trickery is supposed to be applied to the cue ball?I think he didn't choose a very good example, especially because it required him to elevate.
I'm with you. I think he's applying a concept to a shot that it doesn't really work on. The brain is tricky when it comes to pool. If you think you're doing something and you do it successfully, you just further that association in your mind. So, I don't see how the stun-run through or whatever we call it, works on these shots. The required speed takes away the advantages of the shot.I don't understand this one at all.
I understand a drag shot, starting the cue ball with backspin that wears off into a roll to kill speed.
I even understand that sometimes you want to do a 'mini-drag', i.e. instead of starting with backspin you just start with center so it burns just a hair of cue ball speed developing into a roll and allows for a hair more swing speed.
But in this case I couldn't tell the difference between what he did and a soft roll. I'm talking the shot at 5:40. I went to 1/4 speed and it seems like the cue ball was fully rolling very, very quickly after contact. It almost looked like a full roll off the tip, but if not it had to have been almost immediate (like the cue ball was turning forward off the top at maybe 80%+ of a natural roll). The measel I was staring at disappears immediately.
Am I reading this incorrectly? Does this really change the cue speed you can use enough to justify elevation?
I'm with you. I think he's applying a concept to a shot that it doesn't really work on. The brain is tricky when it comes to pool. If you think you're doing something and you do it successfully, you just further that association in your mind. So, I don't see how the stun-run through or whatever we call it, works on these shots. The required speed takes away the advantages of the shot.
Sometimes you just have to take your medicine and roll the ball.
I get the effect. I played with the shot a bit and I just don't think you can achieve much on that specific shot. I can't quite explain why I think it doesn't quite apply, but it seems just outside the speed/distance window for it to work. Interesting concept to mess around with though.So, I’m the only person who was joking with their reply (maybe YOU’RE playing it wrong, Mr. Boyes), but I think some people have missed the point he was making. He specifically chose the shot on the rail not to demonstrate a drag shot, but to show how, by elevating your cue and coming down on the cue ball, a slightly similar effect can be had when you’re tight on the rail. If he was simply demonstrating a drag shot, of course he would have demonstrated with a long pot.
I get the effect. I played with the shot a bit and I just don't think you can achieve much on that specific shot. I can't quite explain why I think it doesn't quite apply, but it seems just outside the speed/distance window for it to work. Interesting concept to mess around with though.
Very true about the difficulty of the drag shot. This is why I practice the shot more than I actually use it. Good cueing practice if nothing more.Yeah, he didn’t do much to explain the shot or how it’s different to a standard drag shot. It’s one of those shots that actually requires fairly precise timing to get the timing and slight drag when tight on the rail.
As an aside, every pool YouTuber makes a video about the drag shot, telling people it’s a safer option for long shots than just rolling through. None of them talk about the increased accuracy needed when playing the shot. The slightest bit of side put on a drag shot will result in a lot swerve as compared to center ball. It’s just not as easy as everyone makes it out to be.
I'm with you here. He didn't really drag that shot much. I've been developing my super soft stop shot where I go for maximum backspin at minimum speed to get the least roll after the cue ball hits the object ball. I think that's what he was going for here. I think having the cue ball so close to the rail made dragging the shot harder and compromised the demonstration. Holding the cue ball for position on the 3 is enough to demonstrate, it seems like the proximity to the cushion is distracting from the core concept.I don't understand this one at all.
I understand a drag shot, starting the cue ball with backspin that wears off into a roll to kill speed.
I even understand that sometimes you want to do a 'mini-drag', i.e. instead of starting with backspin you just start with center so it burns just a hair of cue ball speed developing into a roll and allows for a hair more swing speed.
But in this case I couldn't tell the difference between what he did and a soft roll. I'm talking the shot at 5:40. I went to 1/4 speed and it seems like the cue ball was fully rolling very, very quickly after contact. It almost looked like a full roll off the tip, but if not it had to have been almost immediate (like the cue ball was turning forward off the top at maybe 80%+ of a natural roll). The measel I was staring at disappears immediately.
Am I reading this incorrectly? Does this really change the cue speed you can use enough to justify elevation?
This is super true when playing on a bar table with a 100 year old cue ball. The extra friction magnifies any inaccuracy in your stroke.The slightest bit of side put on a drag shot will result in a lot swerve as compared to center ball.
Right, he didn’t explain it well, but I think the proximity to the cushion was the point of the video. I don’t think he was demonstrating a normal drag shot. He’s too experienced and too good a player to choose that shot as a drag shot demonstration.I'm with you here. He didn't really drag that shot much. I've been developing my super soft stop shot where I go for maximum backspin at minimum speed to get the least roll after the cue ball hits the object ball. I think that's what he was going for here. I think having the cue ball so close to the rail made dragging the shot harder and compromised the demonstration. Holding the cue ball for position on the 3 is enough to demonstrate, it seems like the proximity to the cushion is distracting from the core concept.