25 years ago I would have agreed with you. At that time, I was concentrating on my fundamentals for snooker and worked hard on keeping my stroke absolutely level. As you have pointed out, this necessitated some elbow movement before contact.
Absolutely. Snooker players need to be accurate and by placing the cue under the chin, it better never leave the original vector line otherwise your cue is going to collide with your chin... This is a common error that can cause jumping up on the shot at around impact because the body and mind goes into instinctual mode - meaning it doesn't want to be hit so you move before that happens...thus spoiling the shot...
However, having the right shoulder actually behind your head (if you can actually do it that is) a very contorted position that has the additional disadvantage of its tendency to throw off the head position when aligning a shot.
Whilst there is definately a pivot motion that rotates the shoulders, it is my contention that the right shoulder, the right elbow lay on a plane slightly outside of the shot plane line. Someone like Steve Davis is about as close as you can get to the model in terms of the right arm being on the shot plane but even he, who is straining to make this work, doesn't quite do it either.... close but no cigar.
If the right elbow isn't onplane upon closer scrutiny as is my contention here, then the two planes must maintain their vertical relationship with the right forearm directly opposed to the shot plane so has no nessesary need to rotate during the shot. This contention would mandate that unless the player can deal with a little side to side movement in their stroke and higher head position, the stationary elbow is not the way to go. By using a stationary elbow your aiming your cue at one line moving it along another and the forearm turning and rolling in tandem with the cues movement... sounds like a felt rippers stroke to me.
That was my first mistake.
So I don't really think it was a mistake.
The other mistake was modeling my stroke on someone else who was regarded at the time as having the perfect 'text book' action (Steve Davis).
He was pretty solid cueist in his day and I certainly could think of a few people that are worse than him to copy. I mean he won 6 world championships...
Just do what he did and not what he thought he did.
If instead, I had paid more attention to what actually worked for me on the table, then I would have made a lot better progress.
The proof is in the pudding. For example, for years I was straining to actually get down on the table. I decided to put a minimal knee bend (so as not to fatigue the leg either). Made a big difference for me. However the mechanical model most people promote is just BS.
About 5 years ago, after a 10 year break from all billiards games, I returned to pool. I completely remodeled my stroke, making sure I avoided the mistakes of the past. In the process, one of the things that I learned is that it is absolutely NOT necessary to keep your cue precisely on its initial horizontal plane; some vertical movement does no harm at all.
And if this vertical movement is a consequence of keeping the movement in the elbow only, then it is a price well worth paying imo. The pay-back will be in speed control, consistency and hitting the c.b. where intended.
If your arm works in the correct way directly opposed to the shot plane, then there is really no where that you can't deliver the correct cue action. Just think of Keith McCready for an example.
Keeping the cue moving with zero unnessesary motion is going to strike the CB more accurately.... how can it not. Assume for a second we did both models within a range of proficiency... which will be more accurate a)a cue that never leaves its vector line or b) a cue which moves up and down on a plane around a fixed point. Which also do you think will be more consistant...
Speed control is about force of delivery...it has nothing to do with model. I don't know a single person in the pool rooms that couldnt learn to better control their speed with the strokes they have. It is something which is developed in a player regardless of stroke. A stroke has to be really screwed up to have a problem so big that this skill cannot be developed...lol