I'm interested if any of you instructors have used weights for stroke training before and what you think of this method.
A friend and I have had a lot of success straightening out our strokes through training with weights. Shooting pretty straight left handed too even though I never play left handed, its all from doing this exercise!
I've been putting a very small 2.5 lb weight on the back of my cue stick and doing slow deliberate strokes through a tight gap until my back hand shoulder burns so good.
I focus very intensely on getting into my perfect stance, a slow perfectly straight back swing, this is where I feel the burn in my back hand shoulder, and a smooth accelerating straight stroke.
I started doing this jacked up over a ball as well, it is much harder on the shoulder with the elevated back hand. It's definitely helping me get comfortable delivering a good straight stroke on a jacked up shot.
I've been doing 1 set of this every day as part of my warmup. Every other day I go hard and do 3+ sets, but I make sure not to shoot right after because that feels weird. And I've found taking a couple days off from this exercise every couple weeks to rest up is critical.
My results feel incredible! :thumbup:
My right and left hand stroke is straighter than ever. I'm getting new high runs of consecutive successful long straight shots.
The balance in my stance is greatly improved. During the drill I stay down in the stance for minutes at a time, so I'm forced to figure out a way to make it comfortable. Now taking regular shots when I'm in the stance for 10 seconds feels like nothing at all. And I'm much more resistant to head and body movement during my stroke from practicing standing still and swinging a cue with extra momentum!
I think the most interesting result of this drill is that it's actually improved my grip. The extra weight on my cue stick pulls straight down so it makes my wrist naturally fall into a neutral position. Any turning of the wrist takes more effort to fight the balance of the weight.
And the extra momentum of the cue stick is actually helping me develop a lighter grip. It sounds weird, but with that extra weight I just let the cue stick fall into the spot that takes the least effort to keep it there and then stroke.
Its like all the bad habits of my regular stroke are harder to maintain with the little bit of extra weight on the cue, so naturally I develop the motion that requires the least effort, and that's how I want to be shooting anyway!
I don't know why I never read or saw any videos about a method like this before... I feel like I'm making huge breakthroughs thanks to this! I can't wait to see what a few more months of this will do for my stroke, especially on elevated cue shots!!
A friend and I have had a lot of success straightening out our strokes through training with weights. Shooting pretty straight left handed too even though I never play left handed, its all from doing this exercise!
I've been putting a very small 2.5 lb weight on the back of my cue stick and doing slow deliberate strokes through a tight gap until my back hand shoulder burns so good.
I focus very intensely on getting into my perfect stance, a slow perfectly straight back swing, this is where I feel the burn in my back hand shoulder, and a smooth accelerating straight stroke.
I started doing this jacked up over a ball as well, it is much harder on the shoulder with the elevated back hand. It's definitely helping me get comfortable delivering a good straight stroke on a jacked up shot.
I've been doing 1 set of this every day as part of my warmup. Every other day I go hard and do 3+ sets, but I make sure not to shoot right after because that feels weird. And I've found taking a couple days off from this exercise every couple weeks to rest up is critical.
My results feel incredible! :thumbup:
My right and left hand stroke is straighter than ever. I'm getting new high runs of consecutive successful long straight shots.
The balance in my stance is greatly improved. During the drill I stay down in the stance for minutes at a time, so I'm forced to figure out a way to make it comfortable. Now taking regular shots when I'm in the stance for 10 seconds feels like nothing at all. And I'm much more resistant to head and body movement during my stroke from practicing standing still and swinging a cue with extra momentum!
I think the most interesting result of this drill is that it's actually improved my grip. The extra weight on my cue stick pulls straight down so it makes my wrist naturally fall into a neutral position. Any turning of the wrist takes more effort to fight the balance of the weight.
And the extra momentum of the cue stick is actually helping me develop a lighter grip. It sounds weird, but with that extra weight I just let the cue stick fall into the spot that takes the least effort to keep it there and then stroke.
Its like all the bad habits of my regular stroke are harder to maintain with the little bit of extra weight on the cue, so naturally I develop the motion that requires the least effort, and that's how I want to be shooting anyway!
I don't know why I never read or saw any videos about a method like this before... I feel like I'm making huge breakthroughs thanks to this! I can't wait to see what a few more months of this will do for my stroke, especially on elevated cue shots!!