Now I'm beginning to see why the term "parallel english" is so confusing.
JimS said:
I've always thought that the term parallel english meant that the bridge and grip hands would be moved to one side or the other an equal distance from where they would be with a center ball aim line.
That's what I always thought it meant. In his videos on squirt and english (see
http://www.joetucker.net/side_spin_workouts.htm), Joe Tucker seems to use the term this way. He uses it in a derogatory fashion, saying that it doesn't work. He prefers a combination of backhand and fronthand english.
That would make parallel english a technique for missing sidespin shots.
Exactly what Joe says. And that's true, unless on a particular shot the combination of swerve/throw exactly compensates for the squirt. But now we have another use of the term:
Scott Lee said:
PJ, and Eddie...It's called parallel shift, not parallel english, and the definition is exactly how PJ described what he calls 'front-hand' english. Parallel shift, as a usable term, has been used for a long time, and is quite accurate, imo. Parallel refers to moving the line of aim of the cuestick, by moving the bridge hand, to be 'parallel' to the line of aim through the CB, when aiming with sidespin. Aim & pivot is another term for back-hand english, which also works quite accurately (for some players).
Here Scott seems to be saying that the line of the cue is parallel to an adjusted line of aim, but not parallel to the "center ball" line of aim (the line of aim that would be correct if shooting center ball). If parallel shift is like fronthand english, the resulting line of aim is not the "center ball" line of aim because you've moved the bridge hand without moving the back hand and so have angled the cue a bit in the direction of the english (I assume Scott is saying this, because otherwise it won't work).
Pretty confusing. But the simple fact is that when you shoot with sidespin, you have to aim to hit the object ball in a different spot than you would if shooting with no sidespin. The more sidespin you use and the harder you hit the cue ball, the more you need to adjust (more sidespin means more squirt, and the harder you hit it, the less swerve and throw you'll get to offset the squirt).
Nick Varner's column this month in
Billiards Digest discusses the trouble he had when he first started using lots of english. He had to learn to allow for the squirt in his aim, that is, to aim "wrong" to make the ball. The solution he recommends is "practice, practice, practice", rather than any panacea like backhand english.