Have there been any pro's with a "frozen" stroke arm due to a medical reason?

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AzB Silver Member
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I ask because there were 3 pro golfers... Larry Hinson, Calvin peete, and Ed Furgol who all had a similarly frozen left arm... couldn't straighten out, and it was acknowledged that it helped them to play straighter.
So could an affliction like this help pool players. I seem to remember one player, name escapes me, who played well despite some kind of problem.
 
In 1996 I took my game on the road and played throughout the USA. I was playing 6 to 10 hours a day sometimes more, a lot more or over six months and had to return home due first to frozen shoulder in my right arm. I'm right handed. I attributed this condition to my Nine Ball break. I was hitting them very hard.
The doctors took x-rays of both shoulders and determined I had an abnormality in the formation of both and with rest I should be okay. A regiment of steroids and physical therapy helped to loosen the shoulder after a couple months but there was no way I could play pool during this time.

I later developed an impingement in my left shoulder. This was anticipated if I continued to play pool. In my case due to the irregular development of my shoulders and the extending of the left arm over the head was the culprit. When leaning over the table this is the position of the arm in relation to the shoulder. The pain associated with this ailment was unbearable. I required surgery, steroids injections with lidocaine, two months of immobilization in a sling, and several months of physical therapy to return my shoulder to normal. To this day any extensive Nine Ball play while breaking the balls with power will cause my shoulder to ache.
Thank God I'm primarily a One Pocket player!

Cheers and good luck,

Tom
 
In 1996 I took my game on the road and played throughout the USA. I was playing 6 to 10 hours a day sometimes more, a lot more or over six months and had to return home due first to frozen shoulder in my right arm. I'm right handed. I attributed this condition to my Nine Ball break. I was hitting them very hard.
The doctors took x-rays of both shoulders and determined I had an abnormality in the formation of both and with rest I should be okay. A regiment of steroids and physical therapy helped to loosen the shoulder after a couple months but there was no way I could play pool during this time.

I later developed an impingement in my left shoulder. This was anticipated if I continued to play pool. In my case due to the irregular development of my shoulders and the extending of the left arm over the head was the culprit. When leaning over the table this is the position of the arm in relation to the shoulder. The pain associated with this ailment was unbearable. I required surgery, steroids injections with lidocaine, two months of immobilization in a sling, and several months of physical therapy to return my shoulder to normal. To this day any extensive Nine Ball play while breaking the balls with power will cause my shoulder to ache.
Thank God I'm primarily a One Pocket player!

Cheers and good luck,

Tom
Thanks for replying.
 
I ask because there were 3 pro golfers... Larry Hinson, Calvin peete, and Ed Furgol who all had a similarly frozen left arm... couldn't straighten out, and it was acknowledged that it helped them to play straighter.
So could an affliction like this help pool players. I seem to remember one player, name escapes me, who played well despite some kind of problem.
Stevie Moore played with a tremor in his stroking arm. You could see his hand moving uncontrollably from side to side before the follow through, but he always ended up cueing straight. I can't remember the condition he has. I sometimes have a tremor that I think may have developed due to manual labor/heavy lifting, but not really sure.

Mike Davis is a pro that has the craziest stroke this side of Bustamante. Mike's stroke arm always seemed frozen to me. Wild to watch.
 
Stevie Moore played with a tremor in his stroking arm. You could see his hand moving uncontrollably from side to side before the follow through, but he always ended up cueing straight. I can't remember the condition he has. I sometimes have a tremor that I think may have developed due to manual labor/heavy lifting, but not really sure.

Mike Davis is a pro that has the craziest stroke this side of Bustamante. Mike's stroke arm always seemed frozen to me. Wild to watch.
Mike swings his entire arm from the shoulder down. Like a pump handle. Dude can flat play.
 
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