I am no longer calling it BCEC, now it is called pendulum stroke.
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Actually, we don't just have opinions, we have hard facts. Whereas you only have ideas. You have been given links so that you might actually learn something. Instead of going to those thinks to learn, you outright dismiss them and just want to make up terms instead of using age-old terms, insist that what you think might be happening is actually happening, ect.
When you want to learn the game, go to the links provided. The science doesn't lie. If all you want to do is make up things that you think are happening in your very limited knowledge of the game, then you are in the wrong place for that.
Aside from criticisms is someone going to take a chance and explain side-roll, draw-side and jump-draw from a straight on shot between CB and OB?
If not then you don't have an idea, you just have opinions.
I am glad you have facts but I haven't seen anyone apply them when arguing in this thread. Please incorporate your facts and references into a discussion that people can debate, otherwise you just posted about visiting other sites. Make your case and debate it if you can.
I am glad you have facts but I haven't seen anyone apply them when arguing in this thread. Please incorporate your facts and references into a discussion that people can debate, otherwise you just posted about visiting other sites. Make your case and debate it if you can.
justnum - how flat is your world?
This whole thread can be debated on the forum for months with nothing being resolved. It can be debated on a pool table, and be put to rest very quickly.
Steve
Yeah, I bet it's REAL dark in that box your in! You go ahead an not chalk, after all, according to you, and YOUR science, you don't need to!
Do you really not see the problem with what you posted????
There is NNOOO SUCCHH thing as a straight shot........
It can appear straight but even if it is off just a hair, imperceivable to the human eye, and you hit hard, the CB will divert along the tangent... that is what your are describing or swiping to cause squirt and change the angle is what you are describing.....
You are not stroking it special or anything, you are hitting it off center. If you hit the CB at the OB dead center, with no sidespin, it will stop DEAD, come straight back, go straight forward....PERIOD!!!!!!
Jaden
I will say this, and then I will quietly retreat from this thread.
You only need one stroke. It needs to be smooth, it needs to move the cue stick forward in a straight line, and it should not be decelerating until after the cue ball and tip have separated. The only thing that needs to change is the speed of the forward motion, and the point where the tip contacts the cue ball.
Most players are looking for consistency. One way to move toward that goal is to have a consistent repeatable stroke.
Steve
There is no such thing as only one stroke in pool. You even admit this in around about way by stating that the speed of the stroke changes, which means then there is no one stroke at all.
Also, the length of follow through can vary based on the shot being done. This requires a different stroke.
It maybe simpler to teach one stroke, but in reality there is no such thing. Now all strokes may contain the same concepts as being able to stroke straight not matter what the body postion or cue postion maybe.
My one handed stroke is different than my shooting off the rail stroke.
Consider how the bow is used in playing a violin or cello. There is not one way they bow. They use the bow as needed to produce the music wanted.
They play with their whole body, moving it as needed based on the music being played.
Same idea applies to the stroke in pool. There is not one stroke, but a endless variety of strokes to be used and only limited by the user.
The cue ball doesn't know what you were doing before the tip hit it, any more than it knows what you do after it separates from the tip. All the cue ball can react to is the direction the tip is traveling, and the speed it is traveling at contact. Anything else is just setting up for that contact, and bringing the cue to a stop after separation. There is about 1 to 2 1000ths of a second that actually determines where the cue ball will go.
Steve
A different speed or length of followthrough is not a "different stroke" as it's being suggested by justnum. Neither of these differences changes how the stroke affects the cue ball in any fundamental way, as justnum claims to be able to do.duckie:
There is no such thing as only one stroke in pool. You even admit this in around about way by stating that the speed of the stroke changes, which means then there is no one stroke at all.
Sure, but it's still too small a time to be able to change the predetermined outcome of your stroke. That's still all determined before the tip touches the ball.Hunger strike:
...an anyone agree with me that 2 is double what 1 is?