I think SS means "hit them close to centerball"."Play inside the cue ball and hit them heavy"
SS
CJ says to accelerate through the stroke - is that the same as "heavy"?
I think SS means "hit them close to centerball".
pj
chgo
"Play inside the cue ball and hit them heavy"
SS
CJ says to accelerate through the stroke - is that the same as "heavy"?
This is not true. No offcenter hit is generally "much better" than centerball for "holding" shape. Use what you need without preference or you're needlessly limiting yourself.[using a little inside] You can hit it very "firm" and still hold shape much better than "ordinary centerball".
This is not true. No offcenter hit is generally "much better" than centerball for "holding" shape. Use what you need without preference or you're needlessly limiting yourself.
The idea that favoring one side of the CB is more forgiving or more predictable or makes position play easier than centerball is a myth.
pj
chgo
This is not true. No offcenter hit is generally "much better" than centerball for "holding" shape. Use what you need without preference or you're needlessly limiting yourself.
The idea that favoring one side of the CB is more forgiving or more predictable or makes position play easier than centerball is a myth.
pj
chgo
This is not true. No offcenter hit is generally "much better" than centerball for "holding" shape. Use what you need without preference or you're needlessly limiting yourself.
The idea that favoring one side of the CB is more forgiving or more predictable or makes position play easier than centerball is a myth.
pj
chgo
No offense, Chrippa - lots of people are falling for this "avoid centerball" myth.Patrick, if you just tried it the way I explained it you would see. If after trying it and you still can't see, let me know and I will work on my explanations.
Read it again please and think for a while and you might see what i say.
Look at the outcoming result and not at the incoming thought of what you think it´s right - makes a huge different.
Regards
Chrippa
No offense, Chrippa - lots of people are falling for this "avoid centerball" myth.
I use "a touch" of inside English all the time - when it's called for, not because I prefer it. It isn't "better" than any other kind of English or no English.
For instance:
- it isn't more accurate than centerball
- it isn't more forgiving than centerball
- is isn't more predictable than centerball
- it doesn't create more margin for error than centerball
- etc., etc.
Believing these myths might make you more aware of exactly where you hit the CB, and this can help you hit the CB more precisely, but you can do that without believing that avoiding centerball is magical - and without dumbing down your understanding of pool.
pj
chgo
Hit them so the CB floats, dead - heavy. No surprising, just the exact angles in and out. Work the angles with no extra spin after contact with OB.
That is the way I should describe it anyway. You can hit it very "firm" and still hold shape much better than "ordinary centerball".
If you look at the CB after contact with the OB and you have 0 spin, just the correct angle in and out is where you have the true centerball hit imo.
I calculate every shot from there. Fooling around with it a while and you will probably notice that there is very little you can't to. Pivot side, up and down.....
Very fun:thumbup:.
Chrippa
Could that be a "stun" hit? Does the CB slide?
Be well.
I learned a hard center ball hit on the CB as stun. I use stun on cuts to move the CB to the side of the aim line. The CB slides toward the OB.
If I apply english with stun, there is less swerve.
Be well.