I don't know why I took so long to upload this, but I took some good footage of Shane for my documentary at the 2012 SBE in Philly. Enjoy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=naiMHnSQOLI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=naiMHnSQOLI
Nice.....
Thanks for sharing
His arm is very slightly past 90 degrees when he strikes the cue ball, and he also shifts his bridge arm slightly in the direction of whatever english he's applying to the shot. The arm shift, imo, is probably some form of squirt compensation, and/or helps him keep his body/head absolutely frozen at the moment of impact.
At least that's what I've observed watching Shane play.
Very good observation! I've never noticed the little shift in his bridge-arm...I think you must be right, it's probably adjusting to counterbalance to keep his stroke straight and his head still...but who can say? I've always put Shane's stroke in the category as one of the straightest, most centered least extraneous movement ones out there...
It's deceptive how much he actually moves on the shot. I watched some more, and I think I see him moving his right arm as well. I suspect he's applying BHE across the ball as he pulls the trigger, on the last stroke, but he slows it down and has a mechanical approach to the movement so it's highly repeatable. You can actually see his entire upper body shift left or right depending on the english, but at the moment of impact his body is completely still.
He also has a very long bridge. Someone using BHE the same way with a shorter bridge might have significantly less movement.
Thank you OP for the great close-ups!
Yeah, you're right, it's very small movement...since SVB likes to anchor is tip at the ball's contact point on the cloth and apply the english on execution, I'd agree with you...except I can't see any spin in the shots chosen for this video. They all appear to be dead center or stun, yet the tiny shift is still there.
Shane changed his stroke ..... It's alot losser....
His shaft is turning blue. Is that from using the glove ?
Yes, but it was for more speed, not more follow through.On the last draw stroke, it looked like he snapped his wrist to get a little more follow through.
I don't know why I took so long to upload this, but I took some good footage of Shane for my documentary at the 2012 SBE in Philly. Enjoy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=naiMHnSQOLI
On the last draw stroke, it looked like he snapped his wrist to get a little more follow through.
I haven't studied SVB's stroke, but to me his wrist action on that shot doesn't look like something he'd do on every shot. I don't know what that means, if anything...Look closer at the actual movement. A "wrist snap" is just part of the stroke.
Best,
Mike