BillPorter said:
That is my current approach to the problem as well. Last night and tonight I was staying down pretty well. It helps me to practice my fundamentals for at least 30 minutes earlier in the day.
ONE THOUGHT ONLY
One thought at a time is all that I can handle. I suffer (who doesn't? sometimes) from the same tendency to jump up-especially on the critical shot- whether it is the winning shot, the 'case' shot in the rack that solves the trouble in the run, or the setup ball to the lockup safe you need to win- take your pick. I screw 'em all up. (I am the 'trashman'-I can make all the balls that mean nothing)
I don't really think it's that big a deal to
come up a little in a smooth transitional way as part of delivering a good stroke on the ball. For me at least I do most of my aiming b4 I get down on the shot. As I step into the shooting stance- I get lower-take warm up strokes-then get lower-then take aiming strokes- by now I hope I have finetuned and adjusted the original 'standing' aiming line.
Those final couple of 'confirming' strokes have been done at the lowest that I can get- at the table. The last couple of eye movements from CB to OB and CB to OB and CB to OB, I have to do in part with my neck and therefore my head.
That hurts or is at least uncomfortable at my age and my degree af flexibility. Now I have to shoot - Or start the whole friggin deal all over again.
I drop my shoulder a little on every shot-not much,
just a little.. It helps me keep the cue level - just prior to-at-and after contact with the cue ball. Coming up slightly and smoothly helps me clear space to do this and
helps my neck and lower back tension/pain. This actually then makes it
more comfortable for me to stay down(I think of it more as being "still"/not frozen ) after the shot.
I like to keep the
cue stick extended (if other ball traffic will allow) where it was at the end of the delivery of the actual-shot stroke. I like to
leave it out there untill I MUST move it before it gets hits by another ball OR (HOPEFULLY) IT IS TIME TO GO START THE PROCESS OVER AGAIN because I actually made a ball. I AM EXAGGERATING. But not much.
I JUMP UP/ I JUMP UP AND SWING THE CUESTICK-people are NOT SAFE around me when I'm shooting. I jump up like I'm afraid the CB is going to EXPLODE when the cuetip contacts it.
It gets this bad for me at times.
It helps me to shoot length of the table straight shots(slow to moderate speed) with a striped ball with the stripe aligned vertically upright from a
comfortably low shooting stance and leave the stick out there at the end of the stroke. AND WAIT. Until the ball comes back as far as the extended tip. THEN DO IT AGAIN AND AGAIN. Maybe the ball comes back and hits the tip(yeah right) or not - I don't care about that as much as I am trying to WAIT and
watch the ball travel down and back. I'm not in a hurry with this-
I'm trying to change to/or reestablish a good habit.
My final and
only thought in applying this practice in the game is "FINISH then WAIT". Then move out of the way IF your stick is in the way.
My turn at the table is over when I miss. I'm not in a big hurry for that to happen- I miss plenty soon anyway.
"FINISH!!/WAIT"!! helps me. If I can remember-
to think this and only this -when I need to execute that critical shot instead of 'here's where the wheels come off" -something good might happen.
3railkick/Bill/ The trashman/ the curse
(everybody jumps up and steers the cue -just dont hurt any bystanders)