Pool is a game of optical illusions
i was practicing my draw shot today and after struggling for a while i decided to switch the cue ball with a stripe ball to see how much spin i was actually getting. I remembered from byrne's video that the width of the stripe is the boundary of where your tip must strike the ball to avoid a miss-cue. So i centered the strip horizontally and aimed for the lowest part of the stripe. I struck the ball and got some spin with a small amount of draw. I checked the mark on the ball and was surprised to find my tip hit just slightly below center! I repeated it many times with the same exact result. So i decided to purposely aim below the stripe. I mean almost low enough to hit the cloth! Wow... Awesome draw! I checked the mark and it was just slightly above the lowest part of the stripe. I repeated it over and over again with the same exact result. Within 10 minutes i was drawing the full length of the table!
I'm incredibly happy that i discovered how to hit the draw shot but can someone explain what's going on? Why do my eyes perceive things like this?
P.s.
I tried the same thing on the follow shot and this didn't happen. I aimed at the top part of the stripe and i hit the top part of the stripe. Weird...
the person that invented pool and decided on the size of the balls couldn't have picked a more difficult size for our eyes.
If you put a hand 6" in front of your face so it blocks out one eye and look at an object 10' away it will appear you can see right through your hand while having both eyes open. If you didn't know you had the one eye blocked out it would be hard to tell which eye was blocked out.
You can do this with either eye.
The same with shooting shots. You can't tell when shooting shots which eye is doing what even though when you cut each way that there is one eye that determines how much of the ball we hit on every shot.
Knowing which eye does what greatly increases your understanding of why you miss certain shot and why they just don't look quite right when we get down to aim.
Then knowing how to place them in the proper position without letting any optical illusions hamper your aim can greatly enhance you ability to shoot more accurately.
You have stumbled onto one of many optical illusions this game has to offer. My hats off to you for learning this for yourself. It's fun when we learn how to correct something that has kept us from getting things to work the way we want it to.
When you get down on a shot and it doesn't quite look right move your head right to left just a little and you will find out that your eyes were not in the best position to see the shot naturally. We need to make some adjustments to get our eye in that most correct position.
Like i said the person that decided the size of these balls couldn't have picked a more deceptive size than what they are. Is the balls were the size of softballs we would all shoot like champions. But because they are the size that they are you need to know the right eye position to be able to find the natural sight for each eye on every shot.
This is why the shot looks like it will go and you shoot it and miss the ball by a country mile.
Knowing where the eyes need to be is huge.
Move around and play with it. Good luck geno............