i was told by someone that i should practice stroke at the same speed that im actually going to hit the cue ball on my real stroke.
can anyone here back that up or does it just seem like nonsense?
i was told by someone that i should practice stroke at the same speed that im actually going to hit the cue ball on my real stroke.
can anyone here back that up or does it just seem like nonsense?
MarcusG19...Nonsense. The speed of the backstroke has no bearing whatsoever on the speed of the forward stroke. The backswing should always be smooth and relaxed, with an easy transition to the accelerated forward stroke, which has a natural finish point, on your body, and on the table.
Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com
???? I have to put those up for Scott Lee every so often.
Of course you are practising the speed of your shot, why else take a practice stroke? Now, like Scott's example, power shots, you can't take the proper stroke. It is nice to take the longer stroke though.
If I move the CB only 1 diamond to OB and stop or move diamond or two after constact my practice strokes are the same. Even more power my practice stroke is the same as final stroke, I just lengthen the stroke.
So to answer your question, YES as often as you can! You can't do it with power shots though. If you try your practice strokes would look like John S. All his strokes are really quick and hard, looks odd but he sure makes it work.
???? I have to put those up for Scott Lee every so often.
Of course you are practising the speed of your shot, why else take a practice stroke? Now, like Scott's example, power shots, you can't take the proper stroke. It is nice to take the longer stroke though.
If I move the CB only 1 diamond to OB and stop or move diamond or two after constact my practice strokes are the same. Even more power my practice stroke is the same as final stroke, I just lengthen the stroke.
So to answer your question, YES as often as you can! You can't do it with power shots though. If you try your practice strokes would look like John S. All his strokes are really quick and hard, looks odd but he sure makes it work.
If you watch Efren he hits the cueball with no pause between his last practice stroke and the actual hit and comes closer to his true speed of stroke than any other player I have seen. It has the effect of doubling the length of his stroke and greatly enhances his timing resulting in better speed control.
I think players tend to slow their practice strokes after facing numerous short bridge situations near rails.
I agree with everything Scott says here, but I don't think Marcus asked about the backstroke. I think he asked whether the forward practice strokes should be the same speed as the final forward stroke (although he didn't say so specifically, it's the only sensible interpretation).Scott:MarcusG19:
i was told by someone that i should practice stroke at the same speed that im actually going to hit the cue ball on my real stroke.
can anyone here back that up or does it just seem like nonsense?
The speed of the backstroke has no bearing whatsoever on the speed of the forward stroke. The backswing should always be smooth and relaxed, with an easy transition to the accelerated forward stroke, which has a natural finish point, on your body, and on the table.
My answer is yes
Sorry Jason, your wrong. Almost no one plays like that. Except you.
Here is 9 + minutes of it...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jx3t-eYzsTY&feature=related
Here is 50 + minutes and check out 11:40
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTGMZVben94
All the pro's practice stroke looks very close to the same speed as their actual stroke!
I don't know what you clowns are talking about. That BCA instructor thing... I take anyone can get one?
This is my stroke... I was just playing the cuetable thing and not really trying or I would have 3-5 practice strokes. I stroke the same speed (practice as my actual stroke to hit CB) most of the time!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GpIl1m_Z0vs
There were a ton of shots hit harder than the warm up strokes. What I'll give you is that a ton of shots also match the warm up strokes.
If you break the shot speed into 10 segments, most shots below a 5 speed the warm up stroke is closely matched to shot speed. All the faster paced shots had a slower warm up than the shot itself.
Just like my first post. Doesn't work for power strokes.