I have asked on this forum many times for anyone to give me a legitimate explanation for the Johnny Archer style "smash them so hard you have to jump 3 feet into the air" break.
If a player as accurate as I am (I am not world class, not even close) can get huge spreads and consistently falling balls. at a fraction of the power and effort all while using my standard stroke.
what reason short of showing off does breaking hard do to improve the spread for anyone?
That is not intended as an insult to anyone. I would love it if one of the science nuts (Bob Jewett, Dr Dave, ect..) gave me concrete evidence that harder breaks have an advantage over an accurate break shot at half the speed.
For the purpose of my question only include 8,9,10 ball breaks, safety breaks don't count.
If I achieve 90% of my cue ball energy transfered to the rack, and a plastic tipped break cue at a zillion miles an hour sends 40% to the rack, 40% to making the cue ball jump to orbit and 20% wasted on the absurd body language. how much harder does one have to work to get the same energy to the rack compared with how much is wasted on "Flash"
The pro's must do it for a reason they put so much thought into every part of their game... is this simply tradition hampering their game .. or is their something I am just missing??
Why is the huge monster break given more respect than a more effective break that isn't as visually impressive?
If a player as accurate as I am (I am not world class, not even close) can get huge spreads and consistently falling balls. at a fraction of the power and effort all while using my standard stroke.
what reason short of showing off does breaking hard do to improve the spread for anyone?
That is not intended as an insult to anyone. I would love it if one of the science nuts (Bob Jewett, Dr Dave, ect..) gave me concrete evidence that harder breaks have an advantage over an accurate break shot at half the speed.
For the purpose of my question only include 8,9,10 ball breaks, safety breaks don't count.
If I achieve 90% of my cue ball energy transfered to the rack, and a plastic tipped break cue at a zillion miles an hour sends 40% to the rack, 40% to making the cue ball jump to orbit and 20% wasted on the absurd body language. how much harder does one have to work to get the same energy to the rack compared with how much is wasted on "Flash"
The pro's must do it for a reason they put so much thought into every part of their game... is this simply tradition hampering their game .. or is their something I am just missing??
Why is the huge monster break given more respect than a more effective break that isn't as visually impressive?
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