Thanks, I didn't know that. Any good examples of pool players that you can think of?Most snooker players.
Chris Melling, Jani Uski, Allison FisherThanks, I didn't know that. Any good examples of pool players that you can think of?
All former snooker players?Chris Melling, Jani Uski, Allison Fisher
All former snooker players?
Many snooker players are known for keeping their chins on the cue stick during the stroke which nearly guarantees a piston stroke. I haven't checked carefully, but there may be "native" pool players who do the same. Pro pool stances are generally much lower than 50 years ago.
At one time I noted that both Jeremy Jones and Lori Jon Jones had piston strokes but I don't know if they still do. She has a different last name now.
Ronnie O’SullivanWhat are a list examples of a high quality player with a true piston stroke?
It's when elbow isn't fixed but instead works in tandem with shoulder wrist and hand to keep cue level throughout stroke. Tell tale sign on longer strokes is an elbow that drops in the back stroke as arm extends back. Elbow then moves back up a bit as the cue comes forward and then drops in the follow through.What is a piston stroke exactly?
The stick moves like a piston constrained in a cylinder in a perfectly straight line. For a pendulum stroke, the back of the stick rises and falls as the pendulum rotates.What is a piston stroke exactly?
Many snooker players are known for keeping their chins on the cue stick during the stroke which nearly guarantees a piston stroke. I haven't checked carefully, but there may be "native" pool players who do the same. Pro pool stances are generally much lower than 50 years ago.
And Tony Cohan a lot of timesthe only pro pool players nowadays who don't have a low stance are chang yu lung and evan lunda.. don't know many more. maybe roland garcia
Willie MosconiWhat are a list examples of a high quality player with a true piston stroke?
Not in any footage I've seen of him albeit he an old man in those YT videos. Like most guys of his era, Willie was pretty upright and the arm worked a little differently than in the super low stances of snooker or today's pool. Besides, just focusing in on what his cue is doing, a piston stroke isn't just level throughout, it is straight as an arrow. Willie would veer to the side a lot, whether due to back-hand-english or not as he seemed to do so quite often even on simple stuns. You can check out his instruction video and watch his strokes...many don't finish on the same line he starts on. He does stay fairly flat most of the time tho, but it's not a piston stroke imo.Willie Mosconi
Ye, her lanky (and often bare) arms make it quite obvious on her longer strokes. I get why Chris LOL'd at my comment as the idea of an elbow dropping in backstroke and then coming back up on the forward stroke just seems so odd and who knows how big a movement he imagined. But Ewa has one of the most extreme moves I've seen in terms of the elbow dipping as she takes the cue back and then coming way back up as her arm folds up. More than anyone I can recall. But the same move is present in any piston stroke if it is sufficiently long...just more subtle. On shorter strokes, just the opening of the grip hand and some wrist movement is enough to keep everything level, but once long enough, that elbow has to dip a bit as arm extends back to keep the piston in its cylinder.I agree with Wobbly.
Ewa Lawrence has interesting arm and elbow movement.
how about Mike Sigel?Not in any footage I've seen of him albeit he an old man in those YT videos. Like most guys of his era, Willie was pretty upright and the arm worked a little differently than in the super low stances of snooker or today's pool. Besides, just focusing in on what his cue is doing, a piston stroke isn't just level throughout, it is straight as an arrow. Willie would veer to the side a lot, whether due to back-hand-english or not as he seemed to do so quite often even on simple stuns. You can check out his instruction video and watch his strokes...many don't finish on the same line he starts on. He does stay fairly flat most of the time tho, but it's not a piston stroke imo.
Ha. Sigel's arm is so 'alive' it's hard to pin down what he's doing with all that twitching and veering and finishing with the tip 2 feet up off the table. My guess is he's mostly intending to be a J-stroke type guy. Piston strokes are quiet. The cue's movement is elegant. Sigel is anything but that.how about Mike Sigel?