It would help to use the same bridge length on all shots, so you could memorize the tip offsets required. But a quick mental calculation could suffice. Such that it you had to lengthen the bridge by 30%, you would increase the tip offset by 30%. And vice-versa for shortening.BillYards said:Mike:
I think the pivot point is the bridge hand (which only moves for the initial, off-center alignment). The bridge would need to be the same distance from the cueball on all shots for this method to work consistently.
Also, I don't think Colin is talking about swerving the stick... it is a straight stroke after the adjustments are made.
I really prefer visualizing and then letting my brain and body shoot the shot. This aiming stuff will drive you nuts. You should know some aiming systems to use for long cut shots and spot shots, but beyond that, just let it flow, Man!
A agree, this aiming system could drive someone nuts.
But I think it can also teach a player what is and what is not important in their stroke. Which aspects, when controlled can lead to the greatest accuracy. What aiming system actually works best and which ones may come in handy for certain shots. To gain the knowledge so that you can see the weaknesses in any system pretty quickly, rather that try it out some day, make a few good shots, think it's the new Super-system and then waste 6 months on it until you give it up.
If there is one thing my thinking about systems has taught me, it is the importance in the positioning of the bridge hand, or more particularly the point on the bridge from where it pivots.
All the feathering of the cue in the world won't make a good shot if the pivot is wrongly placed. I think very few recognize how important that is, and so they seek out the angle after the bridge is firm and then their subconscious pulls and pushes to try to get the CB back on the right line.
Anyway, I'm blabbering...hope you know what I mean.
Basically there's nothing can beat the feeling when you just trust your body, bridge and alignment to just fall naturally into the right place. But some days, or some shots it just doesn't look right, it looks harder. The point of these discussions is to lead to ways to be in that groove, that zone, or just to be highly accurate constantly.