The eye fix is the same for everyone.
They just don't know it a very few people understand it enough to really help players everywhere. It's simple to fix but at the same time very difficult.
First the dominant eye has to be identified absolutely correctly.
Then the degree of dominance needs to be determined.
Then the stance has to be adjusted to accommodate the new correct eye position.
Then the player needs to learn how to come down into the shot and not slip over to where they are used to coming down.
There are so many things to this that are just pool related in general and need to be fixed. Things that need to be done to make this transition work well. That many teachers that I know that have tried to teach it just kind of give up. They just get stuck because there are so many scenarios that enter into the correction.
It took me 10 years to perfect this and still I have players that try to trash my hard work in 10 minutes with a few careless words knowing absolutely nothing about what they are talking about.
I guess it is their right to express that they don't understand it at all by dissing it a junk.
But to the players that learn how to do this their game is in for some real fun. The poolhall will be busier because they will want to play more. Instead of leaving immediately after league they will hang out and play some because it is fun to be able to see what your doing and be able to do a little something with those balls on the table.
Getting those eyes right just makes the game a little more fun for everyone.
I believe eye dominance plays a huge roll in lower level players but as you mention, nothing works if you can't hit the ball correctly.
IMHO, there are people with naturally good stances that can't see the ball and there are people who can see the ball but can't swing a stick straight to save their life. Not trying to argue or disagree but I do not believe there is one simple fix for everyone, there are just too many variables.
They just don't know it a very few people understand it enough to really help players everywhere. It's simple to fix but at the same time very difficult.
First the dominant eye has to be identified absolutely correctly.
Then the degree of dominance needs to be determined.
Then the stance has to be adjusted to accommodate the new correct eye position.
Then the player needs to learn how to come down into the shot and not slip over to where they are used to coming down.
There are so many things to this that are just pool related in general and need to be fixed. Things that need to be done to make this transition work well. That many teachers that I know that have tried to teach it just kind of give up. They just get stuck because there are so many scenarios that enter into the correction.
It took me 10 years to perfect this and still I have players that try to trash my hard work in 10 minutes with a few careless words knowing absolutely nothing about what they are talking about.
I guess it is their right to express that they don't understand it at all by dissing it a junk.
But to the players that learn how to do this their game is in for some real fun. The poolhall will be busier because they will want to play more. Instead of leaving immediately after league they will hang out and play some because it is fun to be able to see what your doing and be able to do a little something with those balls on the table.
Getting those eyes right just makes the game a little more fun for everyone.