Quite possibly, but look at Stephen Lee.I wonder if belly has a bearing? Maybe that's why Buddy and Miz had their stance.
Quite possibly, but look at Stephen Lee.I wonder if belly has a bearing? Maybe that's why Buddy and Miz had their stance.
Yeah the belly shouldn't be too much of a hindrance. On shots where you stretch I've seen guys not be able to get set as they normally would but most get used to that way of constantly adapting shot to shot, and have quite a versatile stroke as a result.I was wondering of chin on cue might have been preferred by Buddy but not possible due 5 his size but younger skinnier picks show his stance to be about 10" above the cue also.
Our physique affects our form, no doubt about that. Having a huge belly does you no favours in this sport.Yeah the belly shouldn't be too much of a hindrance. On shots where you stretch I've seen guys not be able to get set as they normally would but most get used to that way of constantly adapting shot to shot, and have quite a versatile stroke as a result.
Having a big chest on the other hand can stop you from getting the chin all the way down whilst keeping proper alignment. There is a guy that plays at my local club that's built like Arnie in his prime. His chest is so broad he can't stick his chin on the cue whilst keeping his back arm aligned, he has to chicken wing it. Women have the same issue. If the chest is on the large side it tends to get in the way.
Yeah the belly shouldn't be too much of a hindrance. On shots where you stretch I've seen guys not be able to get set as they normally would but most get used to that way of constantly adapting shot to shot, and have quite a versatile stroke as a result.
Having a big chest on the other hand can stop you from getting the chin all the way down whilst keeping proper alignment. There is a guy that plays at my local club that's built like Arnie in his prime. His chest is so broad he can't stick his chin on the cue whilst keeping his back arm aligned, he has to chicken wing it. Women have the same issue. If the chest is on the large side it tends to get in the way.
A persons height has no bearing on how far they will be able to get down on a shot, nor does table height. I'm over 6 feet tall and manage just fine. I have seen many 6'5+ people play with a locked leg and chin planted on the cue playing English pool, which some of these types of tables can be just as low maybe a tad lower than pool tables.
All it requires is a wider foot placement. My feet are roughly 1ft wider when I play pool compared to snooker.
I agree, bending down alone isn't comfortable. Who remembers when they first started playing, or after a long time off getting back into the game? The back ache you get is enough to put a sane person off...good job pool players aren't sane. When In my late teens I had a car accident and broke my arm. Couldn't play for months. After I got back into it the back of my locked leg was stiff, tight and ached for a good week. You soon get past the aching stage and it starts feeling comfortable.I think it does have a bearing (players of average height or shorter will always find it more natural to lock the back leg and still get down on the shot than taller players will), but it isn't quite the stumbling block people make it out to be. Like you say, it's something easily fixed with a wider foot placement.
There is too much emphasis in American pool on having a "comfortable" stance, IMO. No matter how you slice it, bending down with a cue in your hand is never going to be a "natural" position for a human. It's with practice that a position becomes comfortable, that it becomes natural.
If a locked back leg is good for your game, but you find it uncomfortable at first, then practice with it and (barring any knee issues/old injuries, things like that) it will become more comfortable over time.
All that being said, I don't lock my back leg when I play pool.
I also agree on the things people have said regarding stomachs and chests getting in the way. The stomach should only be an issue when you're stretching for a shot, but a large chest can get in the way. Isn't there something in an old Ray Reardon book about, ahem, "one or two limiting factors" affecting women playing cue sports?
Our physique affects our form, no doubt about that. Having a huge belly does you no favours in this sport.