The players with the longer bridges also are standing further from the cueball because they are using longer cues. Remember there's ideally 3 things that must be in sync, where you hold the cue, the distance to the cueball from your right ankle bone and the bridge length.
Shane for instance uses an extension on his cue that increases the length substantially and holds his hand nearly 60 inches back, so he's also standing approximately 6" further back from the cueball as well making his bridge exceptionally long. Even with the longer bridge Shane doesn't pull the cue back that far and his follow-through is usually 3-4 inches unless he'll following the cueball several feet.
The Game is the Teacher
Yeah that's kind of another thing now whatever happened to cue specifics. We've all ordered cues from cue makers and you talk to any cue maker and they'll tell you that a customer can drive them nuts with their specific wants in the dimensions of a cue.
I remember Timmy Scruggs telling me he hated to ever answer his telephone. It was either somebody asking where's my cue or somebody changing their order for the 10th time. Players used to be so sensitive to their cues in terms of feel and dimensions.
Now they screw on extensions and leave them there the cue weigh is who knows what, the cue is who knows how long, the balance point is a total mystery and none of this seems to matter anymore.
I remember players being so angry when they ordered a cue and they put it on a scale and it was a quarter ounce off or they balance it on a a pencil and they wanted an 18-in balance point from the butt and it was 19. Where is all the nuance in the pool cue as an instrument.
I'm not exaggerating at all just ask anybody on here who builds cues what it's like taking an order from a customer and how specific they are about their wants and needs. Is this all over now?