Yes, the only physic difference I saw was the other players had one shaft they were committed to. Mike was trying to decide between three different shafts and then said he was playing with his "break cue". All I can do is make suggestions, but I know it's important to me to only use one shaft that I would "bet my life on."
The critical factor of the Mosconi Cup is it only takes a couple of "unusual" misses to get in your head. The fans will chide you about misses MUCH more than a player has ever been exposed to. Usually it's just our own "voice in the head" nagging about missing.
At the Mosconi Cup they'll yell out "don't miss like last time," and laugh like they made the funniest joke. I know Mike is a Champion player and The Team told him we've experienced moments of "forgetting how to play". I'm not sure how to get out of that mode the quickest, maybe just go run around the block, change shafts, brush your teeth....who knows?
I know I"ve had some moments where the game looked like "Greek math" and It was usually a result of an equipment malfunction. Sometimes a tip will get loose or a shaft deflects the ball in an unpredictable way and it throws you for a "mental loop". The game is about precision, pace and confidence. Sometimes they fall out of "alignment".[/QUOTE
I quote "the only physic difference I saw"; unfortunately, it is not physic, it is lack of confidence and knowledge on his part that dragged the entire US team with it, it is shocking to know he is changing cues in the middle of a match, no wonder he missed that long shot!!!!