Pool Player Tics

The Hand Flip

Whenever a miss happens the hand flip usually occurs. My fave pros handflipping ability is Mika and Shane they can give anyone the 6 ball.
 
It is my stupid hat.

I line up the shot, and while looking at it, adjust my hat.

Non stop.

I didn't realize it until one day I wasn't wearing one, and

my hand kept trying to adjust nothing. In video, I can almost

see how hard a shot is just by counting how many times I

move my hat on my head. Drives me nuts, but it is just a

tic. Could be worse, you could shoot with your tongue out...
 
I turn all upside down chalk "right side" up before I shoot. It's probably more of an annoyance than a tic but I won't shoot until all chalk is pointing in the direction the pool God's intended, toward the heavens ;)

Luckily, it only happens every few weeks, and not every night. But, it does not mean i'm not watching.

I'm not superstitious, more of just a little "stitious" ;)

Oh, and when I miss my easy 3 ball run out, I always curse the heavens and ask why God hates only me and beg him to take me now just so he can stop getting some much enjoyment from fuggin with me ;)
 
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i knew a player in dallas circa 1990 named, Manny who would quickly open and close his eyes many times before each shot like a bug just flew into them. every time without fail he would do this.
 
If I ever miss what I would consider an easy shot, I always turn my stick around and fire it across the room like a dart at my opponent.




Seriously though, there is a guy that comes to the room and every time his approaches the table for his shot, he reaches up and pokes the light above the table which then starts casting shadows etc...annoying AF. He only does it when he approaches the table for his shot, not after every shot.
 
I remember “Moro” Paez doing the big head nodding thing he would unconsciously do...
 
I turn all upside down chalk "right side" up before I shoot. It's probably more of an annoyance than a tic but I won't shoot until all chalk is pointing in the direction the pool God's intended, toward the heavens ;)

Luckily, it only happens every few weeks, and not every night. But, it does not mean i'm not watching.

I'm not superstitious, more of just a little "stitious" ;)

Oh, and when I miss my easy 3 ball run out, I always curse the heavens and ask why God hates only me and beg him to take me now just so he can stop getting some much enjoyment from fuggin with me ;)
We have a few players in our weekly tournament that constantly place the chalk back down on the table upside down - just a bad habit just like chalking your cue over the table cloth. Although I use my own personal chalk, it bothers me as well, and I usually flip it back over like it's supposed to be. Do players not realize how it dirties up the rail with chalk?
 
A tic is "an idiosyncratic and habitual feature of a person's behavior" - something quirky done almost unconsciously, purely out of habit, for no apparent reason - mini-OCD. Pool being such an intensely focused exercise, I imagine pool players are especially prone to tics.

A tic can be unconscious. I had mine for awhile before noticing it - a subtle little ritual that just seemed to appear in my game out of nowhere:

One day I noticed that when walking around the table with a piece of chalk in my hand (pretty much after each shot), when I come to another piece of chalk on the rail I'd put the one in my hand down and pick the other one up, all in one quick motion as I passed, deep in concentration about the next shot. I avoided letting one piece of chalk "pass" another one. Fortunately I usually play with only a couple pieces.

OK, odd but not loony tunes - I doubt you'd notice it if we were playing. It surprised me a little, but I realized it was a part of focusing and I probably shouldn't mess with it. Now I rarely notice it, and when I do I just laugh at myself and get on with the shot. It ain't broke so I ain't fixing it.

So what's your tic?

pj
chgo

I understand, is an understatement.......LOL.

I've had gullies tourette syndrome since before I was a teenager.

Most people have tics but very, very few actually have a tic that is bad enough to interfere with everything in their life and even ruin parts of its if not treated.

I take lots of meds to control a long list of things tourette's related and "tics" are are at the top of the list.

Most have NO IDEA how hard it is to put 10 ball packs together while dealing with lifelong tourette syndrome.

It took me a looong time to overcome my disease in order to play pool at high levels.
 
We have a few players in our weekly tournament that constantly place the chalk back down on the table upside down - just a bad habit just like chalking your cue over the table cloth. Although I use my own personal chalk, it bothers me as well, and I usually flip it back over like it's supposed to be. Do players not realize how it dirties up the rail with chalk?

LOL. That's the funny thing, as you probably know I always use my own chalk, yet, I have to touch the house chalk anyways ;)
 
LOL. That's the funny thing, as you probably know I always use my own chalk, yet, I have to touch the house chalk anyways ;)

Just walk by the offending cubes and smack them onto the floor. The more dramatic, the better.

Extra flair for doing it with a butt. Extra extra flair if the butt is attached to your legs.
 
I always have to tap the butt end of my cue on the ground after I chalk. (or off my toe if too hard of a surface)
 
I've always walked around the table counter-clockwise.. maybe it's
to keep the cue butt away from the edge of the table?..dunno.

I think it's a pool player superstition to remove chalks in your line of
vision on a shot.. I do this.. put the chalks together to the side.

The hand flipping... where did that start? The first pro I saw doing
that was Seigel, but it's ingrained in every pool player now... slop
a ball in, hand flip... 'splainin' what you shoulda done, handflip...

Air stroking?.. annoying, just stop that... such a poser move..
watching Ko air stroke 20 times, get down, get back up,
air stroke 20 more times.. get on with it already!
 
I've always walked...

Air stroking?.. annoying, just stop that... such a poser move..
watching Ko air stroke 20 times, get down, get back up,
air stroke 20 more times.. get on with it already!

Isnt the air stroke a prep item? How do they differ from other practice strokes?
 
Isnt the air stroke a prep item? How do they differ from other practice strokes?

I guess you could say it's a prep.. I just read it as a habit... I've played
guys that do the excessive air stroking, then get down and do their
regular practice strokes, get back up and air stroke again... just
annoying.
 
I can't see how it is anything other than a dumb habit.

Even practice strokes when you're down on the shot are mostly dumb habit.
I can't agree with not having some amount of cueing action once over the ball as part of your pre-shot routine, just to keep tension from buiding up in your arms/wrists/hands.

Same reason athletes in other sports do similar stuff to help trigger their actual shot/stroke/swing - waggle for golfers. dribbling the ball a few times before a free throw for basketball players, bouncing the ball a few times before serving for tennis players, repetitive routines baseball batters have in the batters box just before a pitch, etc.
 
I guess you could say it's a prep.. I just read it as a habit... I've played
guys that do the excessive air stroking, then get down and do their
regular practice strokes, get back up and air stroke again... just
annoying.
I do air strokes prior to shooting. In Tor (Zero-x) suggests it as part of the Pre Shot Routine. So more and more will be doing it if they don't already...
 
I can't see how it is anything other than a dumb habit.

Even practice strokes when you're down on the shot are mostly dumb habit.
I posted this a few days ago in another thread:

My warmup strokes accomplish very specific things:

- confirm my stroke is straight and in line with my sight (stance)
- confirm my stance/stroke/sight is in line with the shot (aim)
- help to fully visualize the shot (including stroke)
- rehearse the stroke needed for the shot (as similar as practical)
Different strokes...

pj
chgo
 
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