Trump has a phenomenal stroke. My favorite cueist at the moment...
Yes Robin,
I have mentioned that BHE requires allowances, though I've never gone into complete detail, as it would bore most readers to tears and the best way I hope to present these is in video I think. I hope to produce such a video in the next year or so on a free use, copyright free, donation model... though I don't expect to profit from it... I have a biz and can't imagine coaching such things would be profitable, especially being based in Australia.
Anyway, the allowances I have referred to mainly involve adjustments in aim for throw, in bridge length for swerve and elevation and when hitting high on the CB, which causes early swerve and hence a longer effective or squerve pivot point, and because most instructor's knowledge of these aspects is so vague, they rarely even attempt to investigate the variable of induced throw.
I don't use FHE and don't think it is necessary, though I understand why some players use it. Without detailed BHE adjustment knowledge it is necessary.
I can also appreciate that players may choose to use feel, via a combination of BHE and FHE to adjust for side and even shots that throw thick, but I think in the future, the BHE related knowledge will become a fundamental in aiming adjustment for side and throw effects.
In snooker, while it requires higher accuracy, they play fewer shots with side english than the pool games. That said, even they will become familiar with the relation of the cue's pivot point to stroking and aiming.
Ask your pro instructor if, when aiming for center cue ball, you swipe and hit left of the center, where the CB goes, and you'll get a blank stare most of the time. They want to say the CB goes left, but also know hitting left squirts right... what they lack is knowledge of the pivot point. If they could understand these aspects, they'd be in a much better position to start advising on the almost unspoken variable, which is Induced Throw. The silence is deafening, because our licensed expert coaches are only about a third of the way to working out the variables that come before that in the aiming/stroke paradigm.
Colin
Swiping the CB with an open bridge by bringing the grip hand closer or farther away from the hip just before impacting the CB is different than hitting the same spot on the CB with a tight closed bridge with a straight stroke. a couple of posters have experienced this and find it useful.
Swipe, to me, is a small glancing blow to the contact spot on the CB. Perhaps this reduces the effective mass of the tip of the cue that is imparted at contact - like the effect of a LD shaft.
The swipe thus reduces the effects of CIT and allows the OB to travel closer to the geometrically correct cut angle.
View attachment 388854
Thanks Colin and be well.
No, it's not - they're exactly the same in their effect on the CB.Swiping the CB with an open bridge by bringing the grip hand closer or farther away from the hip just before impacting the CB is different than hitting the same spot on the CB with a tight closed bridge with a straight stroke.
People have "experienced" lots of things that didn't happen.a couple of posters have experienced this and find it useful.
Sorry, it doesn't.Perhaps this reduces the effective mass of the tip of the cue that is imparted at contact
??The swipe thus reduces the effects of CIT and allows the OB to travel closer to the geometrically correct cut angle.
Swiping the CB with an open bridge by bringing the grip hand closer or farther away from the hip just before impacting the CB is different than hitting the same spot on the CB with a tight closed bridge with a straight stroke. a couple of posters have experienced this and find it useful.
Swipe, to me, is a small glancing blow to the contact spot on the CB. Perhaps this reduces the effective mass of the tip of the cue that is imparted at contact - like the effect of a LD shaft.
The swipe thus reduces the effects of CIT and allows the OB to travel closer to the geometrically correct cut angle.
Thanks Colin and be well.
Robin,Colin,
I couldn't agree more. When I was working with FHE and BHE I found them very similar and FHE was easy for me to begin with so there is where I focused. If there is anything that held me back it was the desire to complete both methods by using no allowances. I felt of perfectly executed there might be no need but now I am beginning to think this is why I didn't favor BHE. For some reason I felt it was ok to use allowances with FHE because I knew well it had limitations and whenever stretched beyond them would require an allowance.
I will make sure to go back and repractice BHE allowing myself to perform allowances.
The allowance system that I have come up with for Parallel Applied English per shaft type seems to work fine for FHE but isn't needed at short distances or on shots played slowly. From what I remember I would guess that similar findings will be had with BHE in that short distance shots up to 2 diamonds of distance separation will need no allowance but beyond might be a slightly different story.
The obvious power of the spin generated by the sideswiping action is without question and you are right few people really know much about it. Thank you for the videos and for sharing.
I have noticed Judd Trump using a swipe variation of Back Hand English quite a few times, particularly on screw shots when reversing off the rail, as snooker players refer to it.
Here's an example, in shot 3 of this video at around 52 seconds. The link should take you straight to it.
https://youtu.be/0PlhkHVgqss?t=52s
I photoshopped the image below which shows his alignment prior to backswing his alignment just prior to hitting the CB. There is a significant pivot into his body with the back hand.
Note that his initial alignment is pretty much spot on for a draw shot without any side english.
While he swipes, I've noticed that on these firm shots, the swipe has negligible effect on the application of BHE.
I doubt he is aware of BHE, but he and some other players discover this method for certain shots.
Colin
Here's a diagram to help conceptualize the 2 adjustment methods I described in the post above.
I've had to exaggerate the angles so that the lines and points can be differentiated. In reality, for any given tip offset, the red stars, representing pivot points would be along the line of the cue when it contacts the CB.
Robin,
Colin,
I will admit I haven't aimed that shot with Inside at the farthest part of the pocket letting the throw carry it to the center. Would work on a slow shot. Mostly I have been aiming to the side of the pocket nearest me and using mild cue ball squirt to thin the shot.
I will try this with BHE and a slow stroke, it definitely would be something I haven't been doing. Thank you.
I have noticed Judd Trump using a swipe variation of Back Hand English .....
Colin
I reacted to the word "swipe" as a "strong sweeping blow <a swipe of a paw>".
" I must admit I'm pretty confused about what you're trying to say here LAMas.
To guess a little, I'm thinking you're talking about the tip having a forward component and a sideways swipe component."
Colin
Until I looked at the frame by frame. I thought that he made his cue tip "sweep" across the face CB by moving his back hand to the side and dropping his thumb to allow the shaft tip to move to the side at impact with the CB and out of the V of his bridge - like what would happen shooting one handed without a bridge hand.
So, I was mistaken and described a "glancing" form of "swipe" hit at the CB. He instead stroked his cue tip forward directly into the CB from the final tip location using BHE during the final stroke with no movement of his bridge.
I apply BHE from the stance and I aim normally at CB and move my butt and body to a new stance before stroking and shooting.
So...never mind,
Be well
Colin,
I will admit I haven't aimed that shot with Inside at the farthest part of the pocket letting the throw carry it to the center. Would work on a slow shot. Mostly I have been aiming to the side of the pocket nearest me and using mild cue ball squirt to thin the shot.
I will try this with BHE and a slow stroke, it definitely would be something I haven't been doing. Thank you.
I can align CCB, pivot to left of center and have the CB travel to the right of the original target, hence the OB goes left.Here is something I once posted.
Here is an example where I believe the "dumbed down" thinking to be beneficial to scientific thinking.
Lets say you are learning to pocket balls using english.
To me the task seems much more manageable if you go into practice/playing with these simple principles.
1) If I cue the cueball off to the left then the objectball will go left of where I'm aiming and vice versa. Exception being close shots. (scientific reasoning being the close shots won't have time for much deflection and the spin will throw more than the deflection.)
2) The longer the shot the more principle 1 effect takes place
3) The harder the stroke the more principle 1 effect takes place. (up to a point, scientific reason being curve wont bring it back)
4) The farther I cue from center the more principle 1 effect takes place.
I need to remember these principles and adjust my feel as needed.
Now this to me seems easier and more manageable to get a feel for the conditions than knowing the exact cause... Deflection, curve, and throws and trying to practice knowing you have to adjust the formula for each shot. "Ok, Im going to stroke soft so it will deflect here and then start curving here, then collision induced throw will send it here, while spin induced throw will do this to the shot."
Nope, too much info. Just know the principles and get a feel imo.
I can align CCB, pivot to left of center and have the CB travel to the right of the original target, hence the OB goes left. Because of squirt?
So even if you're just aligning traditionally for side (parallel to the aim line?), if you swipe to wider on the CB (tip moves more to the side?) , if your bridge is long, the same can happen.
If you're just saying more side = more swerve (the spinning CB travels in an arc) then that's right.
If we're talking Induced Throw (friction/gearing?) changing the OB angle, there are a lot of situations where more spin = less throw (less friction or less gear pressure) and when a little more (parallel English) increases throw but even more (swipe) decreases it.
Colin
Here is something I once posted.
Here is an example where I believe the "dumbed down" thinking to be beneficial to scientific thinking.
Lets say you are learning to pocket balls using english.
To me the task seems much more manageable if you go into practice/playing with these simple principles.
1) If I cue the cueball off to the left then the objectball will go left of where I'm aiming and vice versa. Exception being close shots. (scientific reasoning being the close shots won't have time for much deflection and the spin will throw more than the deflection.)
2) The longer the shot the more principle 1 effect takes place
3) The harder the stroke the more principle 1 effect takes place. (up to a point, scientific reason being curve wont bring it back)
4) The farther I cue from center the more principle 1 effect takes place.
I need to remember these principles and adjust my feel as needed.
Now this to me seems easier and more manageable to get a feel for the conditions than knowing the exact cause... Deflection, curve, and throws and trying to practice knowing you have to adjust the formula for each shot. "Ok, Im going to stroke soft so it will deflect here and then start curving here, then collision induced throw will send it here, while spin induced throw will do this to the shot."
Nope, too much info. Just know the principles and get a feel imo.
Interesting.
I think I concur.
Thanks
Be well
From your color ins LAMas.... I'll do my best, from what I can interpret!
Originally Posted by Colin Colenso View Post
I can align CCB, pivot to left of center and have the CB travel to the right of the original target, hence the OB goes left. Because of squirt? Yes, but depending on the length of pivot.
So even if you're just aligning traditionally for side (parallel to the aim line?),[Combination of FHE and BHE ask known previously as parallel but almost never really parallel] if you swipe to wider on the CB (tip moves more to the side?) [???] , if your bridge is long, the same can happen.
If you're just saying more side = more swerve (the spinning CB travels in an arc) then that's right.[yes]
If we're talking Induced Throw (friction/gearing?) [friction btw CB and OB, gearing is one type] changing the OB angle, there are a lot of situations where more spin = less throw (less friction or less gear pressure) and when a little more (parallel English) increases throw but even more (swipe) decreases it.
Colin
[Hard to decifer just reading text in code... hope some answers helped... Colin]