So I've been playing pool seriously for about a year and a half, and due to my obsession with the game and learning all I can about it, I think I've improved very rapidly. I've had one lesson (two hours with two BCA instructors, and me as the only student) in order to nail down my fundamentals of stance, body position, and cue action.
So I started playing exclusively with an open bridge because it was easier for me, and nobody (including the BCA instructors) ever told me any reason I should change that policy. I saw that most (all?) great snooker players always shoot with an open bridge, so I figured learning a closed bridge is somehing I could do without, and worked on the rest of my game.
Recently, though, the best player on my team suggested I learn a closed bridge to help remedy my inconsistency on power-stroke shots, and it has made a WORLD of difference.
Shooting a straight shot with about 6 diamonds between the CB and OB, I can get about 3 diamonds of draw with an open bridge, but I'm a fairly strong guy with a powerful stroke, and I thought I could do better. Since I learned a closed bridge, I can shoot the CB six diamonds and draw it all the way back and then some. Also on follow shots, if I shoot with a closed bridge, the follow "takes" much more promptly after contact, and I can really make the CB go places I couldn't before on angled follow shots.
Does anyone have a similar experience, or an explanation of why a closed bridge seems to have increased my power so much? I know the bridge in and of itself has no effect on the cue ball, but apparently it has some effect on the stroke!
-Andrew
So I started playing exclusively with an open bridge because it was easier for me, and nobody (including the BCA instructors) ever told me any reason I should change that policy. I saw that most (all?) great snooker players always shoot with an open bridge, so I figured learning a closed bridge is somehing I could do without, and worked on the rest of my game.
Recently, though, the best player on my team suggested I learn a closed bridge to help remedy my inconsistency on power-stroke shots, and it has made a WORLD of difference.
Shooting a straight shot with about 6 diamonds between the CB and OB, I can get about 3 diamonds of draw with an open bridge, but I'm a fairly strong guy with a powerful stroke, and I thought I could do better. Since I learned a closed bridge, I can shoot the CB six diamonds and draw it all the way back and then some. Also on follow shots, if I shoot with a closed bridge, the follow "takes" much more promptly after contact, and I can really make the CB go places I couldn't before on angled follow shots.
Does anyone have a similar experience, or an explanation of why a closed bridge seems to have increased my power so much? I know the bridge in and of itself has no effect on the cue ball, but apparently it has some effect on the stroke!
-Andrew