Zims Rack said:
Bill- When the CB is about a diamond from the OB, do you still use this method for the draw shot? Wouldn't that draw the CB too far, how do you control the distance of the CB on a draw shot?
Zim
Yes, I always use an 11" closed bridge and hand all the way back on the butt of the cue, shooting as level as possible.
About 6 months ago, I got disgusted with my draw shots because they were going too far back or I would have no idea how far back the cue ball would go. I spent months working on this problem.
First I concentrated on my cue. I experimented with different sizes of shafts (13mm, 12mm, 11mm, etc.), different brands/types of tips, and different shapes of tips. The problems I encountered was the surface and shape of my old tip not being consistent. Then I found the best tip for draw, but this was not good for all around playing, etc. I settled on a 12.5mm Moori Q with a dime shape. (Best for draw *and* all around playing.)
Next was to keep the shape of my tip the *same* shape at all times. (The Moori tip keeps its surface the same at all times pretty good and retains chalk the same at all times very well. Also retains its shape very well.) I use a 1/2" Electrical PVC pipe cut in half with 220 grit sandpaper to keep my tip a dime shape. I found a similar product for sale (Road Player Shaper) here...
http://playpool.com/store/shop.php
So now I was shooting my draw shots *always* with the same shaped tip, *always* same tip surface texture, and *always* same amount of chalk (I always chalk well before each draw shot, especially sides).
Then next was practice. I practiced and practiced and practiced. Mostly with the object balls across the middle of the table and cue ball one diamond away. Always using the same 11" bridge, hand on back of butt, and shooting as level as possible. I got to where I could vary the amount of draw I got *very* predictably. Just a few inches back, one diamond, or the whole table.
Now what I'm doing exactly to accomplish this, I'm not sure! It's just kind of automatic now. I think I'm varying the amount of follow through as well as the speed of my stroke. Actually, now that I think about it, that is exactly what I'm doing. Because I can hit the cue ball slowly with a long follow through and the cue ball will go back several diamonds. (If you don't follow through, you of course get little or no draw.)
So for a 2" draw back, I'm not following through very much, just a little and also not stroking very fast. For a draw shot with the object ball all the way at the other end of the table, I follow through all the way until my tip touches the cloth and add a lot of speed to the stroke. In-between is variations of the above.
Anyway I go to all this work and can predictably draw back may cue ball an exact distance almost every time. Then I go to play in a tournament and they have new Valley pool tables with "Teflon" coated cloth! This totally messed up my draw shot distances! Something about the Teflon? Also I need to practice on tables with different cloth for a while before I get adjusted to them. Other than that, I'm quite happy with my draw shots now.