Dominent EYE Therories?

Jake,

Your 'opinion' is noted.

But, why add the comments about CCB and the OB or CB thing?

If you think this is "OLD" stuff, why did you even post?



jjinfla said:
You brought up dominant eye.

It is as normal as dominant hand.

Couldn't even force myself to read any of the posts.

Jake
 
The simple way to determine your dominant eye is watch which eye the cue ends up under on their final delivery. Cue will always pull to the dominant eye. Buddy Hall is a classic dominant left eye player tho he's right handed. In my case my left eye is stronger but in pool my right eye is the dominant eye. Go figure! Earl is a classic right eye dominant player. One of the keys , especially for a beginning player is to set up for your dominant eye. Some folks will contort their body unconsciously to achieve this. I used to watch Larry Hubbart when he was at the top of his game & he would cock his wrist to align the cue under his dominant left eye. The main point here is he did it the same every time. Not classic form but obviously it worked. I studied this for years because their was a nutcase in the poolroom I ran in Cleveland who was always experimenting with this kind of shit.
 
daniels said:
The simple way to determine your dominant eye is watch which eye the cue ends up under on their final delivery. Cue will always pull to the dominant eye..

I tried that experiment with the looking at the words to see if the words moved. Neither one moved but the right eye is clearer because I have more astigmatism in my left.

i have taken the little tests for dominance and most say that I am right eyed. I am right handed and when shooting use both eyes pretty equal, with no discernable preference. But when I shoot leftie, my left eye is definately over the cue. This is an observation I made a long time ago and no longer think about, but just shoot.

Laura
 
jjinfla said:
I subscribe to Bob Byrne's dominant eye theory: "If you have to be told to put one eye over the cue, you are a hopeless case and should stick to bowling"

Jake

I guess snooker players, generally regarded as the best pocketers of balls on the planet, are all "hopeless" since 99% of them shoot with the cue aligned in the middle of their faces.

As other posters have said, whether or not the cue is aligned under the dominant eye (yes, almost everybody has one) is inconsequential. Consistency in alignment from shot to shot is far more important. As Steve Davis said during the 2000 WPC (paraphrased), "Look at Neils Feijen and tell me whether there is anything to this dominant eye theory. He's cueing up with his EAR!" Watch Neils's stroke, though, and it's FLAWLESS.

Any instructor or, in some cases, writers who are too revered, who espouses only one way as the right way is not to be fully trusted. Go to any tournament, men or women's, amateur or pro, and you'll see a myriad of stances, grips, bridges, and head alignments. You'll also see that not everybody plays patterns the same way, or strokes the same way. People are physically AND mentally different. As such, different methods, even way different methods like Feijen's, can't be simply dismissed with a pooh-pooh and a wave of the hand. Instructors who do so probably aren't good instructors, and although I've never met Scott Lee or talked to him, his earlier post convinced me that he's probably a pretty damned good instructor. As long as the end result is the same (OBs fall into pockets and whitey gets to its intended position), you could be balancing a book on your head, using your foot as a bridge, and the other foot soaking in a bucket of water. If you do it the same for every shot (and PRACTICE!!), you'll get better.

-djb
 
DoomCue said:
I guess snooker players, generally regarded as the best pocketers of balls on the planet, are all "hopeless" since 99% of them shoot with the cue aligned in the middle of their faces...

-djb

I think if you don't have a dominate eye (both eyes being equal) would be the best.

I wish both my eyes were of equal strength. I feel I could wear a patch over my bad eye and be a pirate, and it wouldn't affect my pool playing ability what so ever...
 
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