How is a more elevated stroke more precise and repeatable?
pj
chgo
Thanks for asking. The average AZ member is skilled, but many players with otherwise solid games struggle with draw. They are then taught to chalk extra carefully, forcibly accelerate the stroke, aim and bridge very low if they struggle, and sometimes are told to snap their wrist to force better cue tip contact. In contrast, the stroke I recommend requires nothing but a regular stroke (so you might recommend it only on that basis, since you suggest wrist moves for swoops are needless complications and here is a simpler kind of draw stroke with less wrist than many use).
By "precise" I meant that players with decent draw but who often draw too far or too little are able with this new stroke to get precise draw in feet or inches at will. This is a great little draw stroke particularly for small cue ball moves in 14.1 runs. By "repeatable" I mean drawing the cue ball off a full hit straight as a laser back towards the bridge hand every time, not off to one side.
You have a lot of pool knowledge and wisdom and I regard your comments, therefore, I'd be delighted if you'd hit some of these shots and report back. Start with a shorter than typical bridge, practice stroke a few times at center cue ball. Then before your final stroke, elevate the stroke hand slightly then take no special kind of wrist-y or accelerating "draw stroke". Due to the cue's elevation, you should feel a slightly different feel at contact, almost as if your tip is adhering longer to the cue ball. Again, that's feel and the only mechanical advantages I claim are easier-to-shoot draw shots due to the stroke arm's new angle for feel, and also the tip's more downward path at the time of cue ball impact.
Again, you play at a high level but if I can help struggling players by teaching alternative concepts, I'll do it.