I believe I had an arm alignment epiphany

Lowell

Active member
I am mostly happy, but have some concerns.

After a tough hill-hill loss on Wednesday night (got backdoor swept after being on hill), I shot around and tweaked my mechanics a bit. I've been trying to improve my alignment/stance for months now.

One thing I did differently was try not messing with my shoulder/upper arm at all. As in, just keep it in its normal position, and not tuck or bend my arm sideways at all. I did take a pool lesson a few months ago and when I asked my instructor to put my arm in the correct position, it was like this but felt even more weird and "diagonal". But now I get it.

It felt very off at first (and still does), like my arm wasn't centered.But then I realized, this was just my perception messing with me and my alignment seems to be significantly better now. It seems like the goal should be building my footwork around my right arm/shoulder rather than bending my arm to get my chin under the cue at any cost.

My wrist is no longer pronated by default, and when I practice lagging there is far less unintentional sidespin on the ball. When I look backwards, my arm appears to be in one plane, though perception (as noted earlier) can be deceiving.

Only problem is, I seem to be bricking more long shots that I was recently getting more and more comfortable with. So I'm hoping I don't need to go back to square one here. My wishful thinking is that this is happening because I'm so focused on the new change that I might forget some of the ingredients (rather than because the misses are caused by what I thought was improved form). It has only been since Wednesday night, so I'll give it time.
 
I am mostly happy, but have some concerns.

After a tough hill-hill loss on Wednesday night (got backdoor swept after being on hill), I shot around and tweaked my mechanics a bit. I've been trying to improve my alignment/stance for months now.

One thing I did differently was try not messing with my shoulder/upper arm at all. As in, just keep it in its normal position, and not tuck or bend my arm sideways at all. I did take a pool lesson a few months ago and when I asked my instructor to put my arm in the correct position, it was like this but felt even more weird and "diagonal". But now I get it.

It felt very off at first (and still does), like my arm wasn't centered.But then I realized, this was just my perception messing with me and my alignment seems to be significantly better now. It seems like the goal should be building my footwork around my right arm/shoulder rather than bending my arm to get my chin under the cue at any cost.

My wrist is no longer pronated by default, and when I practice lagging there is far less unintentional sidespin on the ball. When I look backwards, my arm appears to be in one plane, though perception (as noted earlier) can be deceiving.

Only problem is, I seem to be bricking more long shots that I was recently getting more and more comfortable with. So I'm hoping I don't need to go back to square one here. My wishful thinking is that this is happening because I'm so focused on the new change that I might forget some of the ingredients (rather than because the misses are caused by what I thought was improved form). It has only been since Wednesday night, so I'll give it time.
I never knew I had a little chicken wing going on until a Master instructor showed me on video. I assume I’ve doing that for close to 40 years so it will be tough to change. Aiming seems to be easier with everything in line but trying to override a decades long bad habit is tough! While in practice, I’m super focused on it but in a match I try to just forget it. Changes are difficult!
 
Have you tried video recording yourself?

Not since Wednesday, but I will soon when I get the chance

I never knew I had a little chicken wing going on until a Master instructor showed me on video. I assume I’ve doing that for close to 40 years so it will be tough to change. Aiming seems to be easier with everything in line but trying to override a decades long bad habit is tough! While in practice, I’m super focused on it but in a match I try to just forget it. Changes are difficult!

I did know I have a pretty bad chicken wing, but my efforts at correcting it were not helping.
 
Keep working on it, eventually it will become second nature. I’ve been working on it for about a month and I haven’t kicked the habit yet. I’ll post back when I do. I’m hoping to correct it by the end of Summer.
 
When practicing don’t worry about making balls, long shots .. etc. you’re changing your stroke so don’t complicate it with trying to make balls too. Put a ball on the spot and shoot it into a far corner pocket over and over and over, 4000 times or more using proper form. You’re working on muscle memory. Once it becomes second nature, comfortable, add some balls to shoot at and don’t worry about it anymore
 
I did know I have a pretty bad chicken wing, but my efforts at correcting it were not helping.

How tall are you? Tall helps with that but otherwise you'd be on diminishing returns. If you watch the majors, few have that textbook pendulum thing.

If you set the stroke finish past the ball maybe 3 inches and aim for that point, hitting the cue ball "perfect" will become a function of that.
 
How tall are you? Tall helps with that but otherwise you'd be on diminishing returns. If you watch the majors, few have that textbook pendulum thing.

If you set the stroke finish past the ball maybe 3 inches and aim for that point, hitting the cue ball "perfect" will become a function of that.

I'm 5'4, so not exactly tall. I actually don't have that much elbow drop, but I agree that elbow drop is not the bad thing it's made out to be. It's not a quirk that some pros have, it's more like a feature that most of them have.

However, I view the chicken wing as a different issue. For me at least, it inherently leads to wrist pronation, and the cue not being 100% straight at contact. With my old setup, I noticed that my lag practice would result in unwanted right English like 80% of the time.
 
I'm 5'4, so not exactly tall. I actually don't have that much elbow drop, but I agree that elbow drop is not the bad thing it's made out to be. It's not a quirk that some pros have, it's more like a feature that most of them have.

However, I view the chicken wing as a different issue. For me at least, it inherently leads to wrist pronation, and the cue not being 100% straight at contact. With my old setup, I noticed that my lag practice would result in unwanted right English like 80% of the time.
At 5'4"

Pfft. Watch some Parica.
 
Back
Top