So would I, but only to prove to the superstroke believers what I already know. There are many things that we know are true without seeing them demonstrated before our eyes.Quite candidly:
When I began playing at age 18 (39 years ago) I was quickly taken in by "stroke magic"--generally typified by people who could get extreme amounts of draw. Right now, in fact, there's a new thread discussing "who has the most draw," which implies that monster draw is a possession of certain players. I posted in that thread and made the point that amount of draw depends only on CB contact point and speed of the stick at the point of the hit (and also angle of the hit, which I didn't mention).
But I WOULD very dearly like to prove that experimentally beyond any doubt. I'd like to show that a machine--or a totally inexperienced player--could achieve as much draw as the most dramatic draw shot you might see in a video (Mike Massey, Corey Deuel, for example), simply by hitting the CB near the miscue limit with a lot of speed (without regard to loose wrists, magically hand-built cues, or ideal grips).
I'm aware that all reasonable theory supports that there's no "magic" in stroking. I'd like to actually demonstrate it empirically.
pj
chgo