As a mid level player at best, my draw stroke is still my weakest stroke to execute consistently. I had my all time high run of 52 last week, so I won't be joining the tour any time soon. :wink:
Do players with a very high skill level still experience the fall off in draw when playing on, say your local public tables, which aren't maintained to a high level?
The reason I ask, is that many YouTube videos show players demonstrating the draw technique, and if the cloth condition is any indicator of the condition of the balls, then I've got a long upward road to perfecting my draw shot under less than stellar conditions.
I'm just confused by how easily I can draw after cleaning the cue ball, but I want it to be a result of my skill and not from any extraneous factors...
Perhaps a more specific example is needed. If I run a line of balls from side pocket to side pocket, and shoot from behind the head spot, should drawing the cue ball to rebound off of the head rail be almost an automatically make-able shot for the better player regardless of table and or ball conditions???? :shrug:
How much draw you can put on the Q ball is definitely a result of the equipment. If the cloth is bran new, you can drawthe Q ball a mile without trying. If the cloth is old and dirty, you may be lucky to draw it 5ft.
Clean balls will help your draw a bit, but the cleaner should be wiped off completely. This overdraw effect shouldn't last long.
If you play in tournaments, try to immitate the tournament conditions. Do they play on old cloth, dirty balls? If so, you don't want to play on pristine cloth with very clean balls. It is a different world when playing on a different table. JMHO