Cornerman said:
Did someone else other than the internet forums describe it such a fashion?
Parallel aimining is exacty what it sounds like, right or wrong. The cue stick is parallel and is stroked parallel to what would be a center ball stroke. If it wasn't parallel, then it wouldn't be called parallel. It would be pivoted
Parallel Aiming, as Bob Jewett See It
Many instructors of two or three decades ago believed that the cueball would still go straight.
Fred
I have asked you this when we met in Valley Forge because it has bothered me for quite some time. I am now finally back to doing it by pivot.
A lot of players here in Canada coming from a snooker background will say parallel works, as long as you know how much to shift. At least that is what they told me.
This is what I was told(I am not saying I agree with it all all, I am just telling you how I understand it.):
1)Move my right leg, my grip hand, and my bridge hand all in a parallel fashion, to a line according to how much the cue ball will squirt, before getting down on the shot,
2)walk into the shot as if I was shooting a straight in shot, except that I am now aiming at a spot off center of the cue ball,
3) and then just shot straight.
How much to shift depends on distance and speed.
The theory behind this, as I understand it, is that the player wants to be able to use the same straight stroke on all his shots. A lot of snooker players believe it is more accurate if you only use one stroke in a game.
I have watched these guys shot, and I think they do not really shift parallel. May be they think they do, but they do not. They are facing the table at a different angle, eventhough may be they are using the same straight cueing action, i.e. they are not using backhand english or turning their wrists, or forearm. I am not sure if I am being clear. By the same straight cueing action, I mean they want to always deliver their cues along the same line, at the same distance away from their bodies. That is why they also move their feet.
With the slow drag shot with english(swerve), they raise the butt end of their cues, and they choke up on the shot, so may be they are facing the shot square, the cue is far from being level.
Just my observation.
Richard