I agree with Scott. The Balance point would only affect the position of your grip if you were playing one handed.
Doesn't the balance point directly affect how much weight is on the bridge hand and the grip hand? It seems to me that affects the feel of the cue. BTW, I am one handed! . . .but, I shoot with a bridge that I made, which is very hand like. What I was trying to say was that weight on the grip hand is caused by cue weight and balance point. A forward weighted cue is putting less weight on the grip hand. A rear weighted cue more for the same cue weight. Wrap type affects the friction between your grip hand and the cue. At one time, I was having a problem with a linen wrapped cue sliding during my stroke when shooting. This would cause me to grip it tighter. 2 solutions existed. . .tighter grip or move grip closer to the balance point. Both stopped this unintensional slip stroke. Different wrap would have also helped, but at some cost. I did get this corrected, but now, I think I would like a slightly more rear weighted cue. This also matches the reccomendation of Willie Mosconi which was to grip 3 - 6" behind thee balance point. While not gospel, I do like a cue where I can grip naturally at this point.
How tall are you? Mosconi was 5'5. He held his cue a little bit forward but ended up a 90 degrees by useing the slip stroke......SPF=randyg
What exactly is a slip stroke? I have heard 2 versions.
1 You slide your hand a few inches back on the cue as you stroke the final stroke.
2 You let the cue slip forward thru your hand as you contact the CB as if you are throwing it.
Either way what is the purpose?
I can't figure what the advantage of a slip stroke is supposed to be or how in the heck it's accomplished. I've only personally seen one man who really knew how to do this and that was Allen Gillbert. He invited me to the ELKS Lodge? in North Hollywood were he was giving a lesson. After the lesson he looks at my cue which had a rubber grip and said "Take that damn thing off and learn the slip stroke." His only reason given was that all the Greats used it including Willie Hoppe.It's number 1. As for the purpose, I can only give my opinion, which isn't worth much since I don't use it. I've tried it but found it harder to control and less consistent than a normal stroke. My grip hand is probably too sticky - maybe Mosconi used a lot of powder?
Say you want to bridge fairly close to the cue ball, say, 6 inches. With a short bridge like that you may find it awkward to grip far enough back to have a long follow through with a level cue. Slipping back allows the long follow through without changing your bridge length and keeps the stroke fairly level.
Just my opinion, which I don't hold with any confidence. It's not a style I would recommend trying to emulate. There have been some great slipstrokers, but many more that don't do it.
I have three problems with the grip hand, I am hoping that some of you might be able to help me.
1. How to make the whip wrist action to generate cue power, draw, top and english. I am starting to think that I can't do it right, either I miss, my wrist becomes too loose in all directions or some of my fingers don't know if they should be on the cue to stabilize or what to do. How can I learn this wrist action?
2. I can't seem to find the right way to hold the cue. I've tried making a ring where I make a circle with mu thumb and index finger and taking a loose grip about the cue, I tried it making the ring with thumb and index and midle finger to making the circle thicker to make it more stable. I've tried bending my fingers, making a kind of basket for the cues to lie in, and a looot more variations. It look sooo easy when others play, they have a semi-open hand when the cue is in the back of the swing and they seem to close the hand around the cue when in the front of the swing where they are hitting the cb, but no one has been able to explain a good way that feels comfortable. Can someone help?
3. I can't seem to relax my grip hand when trying to use power to shoot. especially when making draw shots, I shoot low on the CB, and then when shooting a bit hard, I grip hard on the cue, pressing the tip doing, resulting in a shoveling jump shot of the table. I am actually almost an expert in this by now... How do you handle the instinct to grip the cue hard when shooting hard, I think it is all a mental thing, being nervous about making the cue fly out of the hand and God knows where it will fly...
I can't figure what the advantage of a slip stroke is supposed to be or how in the heck it's accomplished. I've only personally seen one man who really knew how to do this and that was Allen Gillbert. He invited me to the ELKS Lodge? in North Hollywood were he was giving a lesson. After the lesson he looks at my cue which had a rubber grip and said "Take that damn thing off and learn the slip stroke." His only reason given was that all the Greats used it including Willie Hoppe.
When Gillbert stroked the ball his grip hand nearly left the cue on his back stroke.
I've been reading this interesting thread and have one question. At what point in the stroke should your arm be perpendicular? I'm 6'1 and hold the cue almost at the very end. At most I have one finger just touching the wrap. I am starting to feel like I am holding the cue to far back.
Basically your forearm should be vertical when your tip is at the cue ball.
1. You really don't need any "whip action" in your stroke. Your forearm is quite capable of generating all the cue speed you need to get the results you want. Your wrist should remain relaxed throughout the entire stroke, regardless of whether it's a follow, stop, or draw shot.
2. A good grip is relaxed and comfortable, and remains constant throughout the entire stroke. It's not a matter of which fingers are used. I've seen good grips in a variety of different strokes. Your grip hand should cradle the cue, not grip it.
3. One way of describing how hard to grip the cue is to hold it as if it were a baby bird...firm enough so it doesn't get away, but not so tight as to hurt it. Start by using a softer stroke and focus on keeping your grip relaxed, Gradually, increase the speed while making sure you don't tighten your grip. As soon as your grip tightens, you lose control of the tip, so back off immediately. You can get there, but do it gradually. Your grip and stroke shouldn't change, just because you are increasing the speed of the shot.
Steve