VTEC John
Active member
(Editing this on Tuesday.) Thanks for all the responses, but I must not have been totally clear, so I'll try to clarify. I understand that jumping up is not a good thing, that after contact it's a moot point, and that some great players move on the shot. No arguments there. I'm just curious about WHY we sometimes jump up. So here's the original post:
I have wondered about this proposition for a long time and am curious whether anyone agrees with it.
We don't miss because we jump up; we jump up because we know we've missed.
That is, during the stroke, or perhaps at the moment of impact, muscle memory or some other part of our sensory equipment informs us that we're not sending the cue ball where we intend--and we jump up in response to the bad news. Any thoughts on this?
I have wondered about this proposition for a long time and am curious whether anyone agrees with it.
We don't miss because we jump up; we jump up because we know we've missed.
That is, during the stroke, or perhaps at the moment of impact, muscle memory or some other part of our sensory equipment informs us that we're not sending the cue ball where we intend--and we jump up in response to the bad news. Any thoughts on this?
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