Brieseth's One-Arm Drill

ndakotan

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
On the WPBA website, Sarah Rousey says that Brieseth's one arm drill is great for stroke training (she said she did it for 6 hours). Can anyone tell me what the drill is? Do you get in your regular stance and shoot at the cue ball without a bridge hand?

Any insight would be appreciated.
 
ndakotan said:
On the WPBA website, Sarah Rousey says that Brieseth's one arm drill is great for stroke training (she said she did it for 6 hours). Can anyone tell me what the drill is? Do you get in your regular stance and shoot at the cue ball without a bridge hand?

Any insight would be appreciated.

SouthofCanadan,
Here is a description from the thread on Sarah's forum - based on my lessons with Jerry B.; I don't think she had any corrections of my description.


Just some additional clarification of Jerry's one-handed drill. In my discussions with Jerry, he described this drill as the best and quickest way to give a new player (or an older one with bad habits like me) the feel of a proper stroke - smooth acceleration, let the cue do the work, move the arm only from the elbow down, long and PERFECTLY STRAIGHT follow through, TENSION-FREE grip throughout the stroke (drill can even be done with the cue just resting lightly on one finger of your grip hand - helpful if your stroke is a complete mess like mine). It is not a drill to learn jacked-up or jump shots. It is a great drill to learn to move the cue stick without tension and jerking from your grip hand.

To set up the drill, line some balls up along the short rail, 3-5 inches off the rail. You will then shoot these balls the length of the table into a corner pocket. Set up to shoot the ball as you normally would (I'm assuming you are right handed). Then without moving the cue (cue is resting on the rail), remove your left hand, and rest your left hand on your left thigh (you can use your left arm to stabilize and support your body). This will leave your body position a little higher than you usually shoot. Make sure that your right hand is behind the plane of your body (if not, then move your right hand position further back than usual). From this position make your one-handed stroke using the SAME pre-shot routine that you would if shooting normally. A typical example is slow but rhythmic back swing (eyes on target), bring cue tip back to ball (eyes on cue tip and cue ball as tip comes forward), a second slow but rhythmic backswing (eyes on target), bring cue tip back to ball (eyes again switch back to cue tip and cue ball as tip comes forward). Pause at this point, decide if aim and stroke feel correct (if not, then reposition slightly and repeat the 2 warm-up strokes), if correct then SAME slow but rhythmic backswing, stroke through the ball with a smooth stroke, dead straight follow through, moving right arm only from the elbow down (tip dropping to touch the cloth). You judge your stroke by the quality of the stroke and the tip position at the end - NOT by the pocketing of the ball. This will really give you the feel of letting the cue do the work, and of getting the tension out of your right hand grip (if you have had trouble trying to "steer" the ball during the stroke).
 
Bert Kinister also has a one armed drill(different from Briesath's) in his Volume 11 "Advanced Fundamentals."Basically he wants you to align properly and make ten straight in one handed pots in a row.

It's not fair if I explained Bert's copyrighted material here and the process of getting aligned properly. He does walk you through the steps of how to succesfully align and make one handed (no rail support) shots.

Without proper alignment, the shot becomes much more unlikley.I say unlikely, while Bert says impossible.In my opinion, this is one of Bert's best tapes that can help your stroke and the mighty X is another.He has a few other stroke building shot drills on the tape.
RJ
 
Thanks for doing that explanation for me. Six hours is a long time to do that, but when I went for a lesson when I was about 16 I had a little hitch in my stroke that we were trying to work out.

ndakotan, I answered your PM as well. Hope it helps.

Sarah
 
One are drills, i use to mess around playing with one arm and i am quite good at it, i can even break the balls, hard at that using one arm. They say walking in the shot with one arm gives you that correct alignment of the shot then as normal use your other hand when down on the shot. This being heard although.
 
Notes on Kinister's one-hand and X-drill

recoveryjones said:
Bert Kinister also has a one armed drill(different from Briesath's) in his Volume 11 "Advanced Fundamentals."Basically he wants you to align properly and make ten straight in one handed pots in a row.

It's not fair if I explained Bert's copyrighted material here and the process of getting aligned properly. He does walk you through the steps of how to succesfully align and make one handed (no rail support) shots.

Without proper alignment, the shot becomes much more unlikley.I say unlikely, while Bert says impossible.In my opinion, this is one of Bert's best tapes that can help your stroke and the mighty X is another.He has a few other stroke building shot drills on the tape.
RJ

I can't agree more! I have taken lessons from Bert in the past and I promise it will change the way you shoot for the better. Those DVD's show you how to get the proper alignment no matter what size or shape you are. That is what I thought was so great.

I have seen both of these DVD's too. I started out with the one handed drill and the getting in line Fundamentals video. I can now do the Kinister X-Drill at the hardest level. I still haven't made ten in a row on the hardest level, but just making it a few time out of ten was an accomplishment all by itself from where I was before hand. (Although on the video they do it on a 7 foot table, I've been doing it on a 9 footer.)

Like recoveryjones, I won't explain the whole thing here for the same reasons, but it is that time of year to start asking for those presents. LOL
 
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