Some players call it "digging in", to the cue ball. CJ has mentioned it a few times when he's talked about staying closer to center with cueing.
I think it's all dependent on the timing in the stroke. I've proved this to myself by an example. I get down on the shot and before I take my backstroke to shoot, I move my whole body forward or backward an inch or so. My timing is thrown off quite a bit. I can't seem to get the correct amount of spin/speed.
Best,
Mike
First off, "timing" has several different meanings when referring to the pool stroke, depending on just what one is actually talking about.
1. Timing can mean the act of trying to have the cue accelerate through the cb. In reality, this can not really happen, as the cue significantly reduces forward speed at the moment of contact with the cb. Also, it has been shown that one can not even accelerate all the way to the cb. The last few inches before contact there is zero acceleration and the cue is traveling at a constant speed. Most amateurs actually decelerate on the way to the cb without realizing it.What you don't want to have happen is to be decelerating the cue before contact.
2. Timing can also mean not having a forward straight stroke and getting your cue to come on line at just the right moment to hit the cb where you intend to. To exaggerate, the cue is coming forward on an "S" line, and you bring it back just in time to hit the cb correctly. Few have an actually straight stroke. Most wobble side to side on the way to the cb.
If you take the best stroker alive and the worst banger alive, have them hit the cb at the same spot, at the same speed, at the same angle, you will get identical results. What separates the better players stroke from the lesser players stroke is accuracy and repeatability.
The amateur thinks he is accelerating on the way to the cb, but often is actually not doing so. Often you will here an amateur say "where did that spin or draw come from?" Stroking correctly can often cause this to happen.
The other part is accuracy. Very few amateurs actually hit the cb where they think they are hitting it. This is easily proved by the chalk mark on the cb or training ball. The main reason they can't hit with precision and repeatability is due to how they actually stroke the cue, or bring the cue forward. They think they are going straight forward with it, but under analysis, they aren't. The biggest cause of this,- are you ready for this one?- is using a piston type stroke. There are enough moving parts in a piston stroke to make it very difficult without an extreme amount of practice to have the cue go straight reliably. That combined with a non-chalant stance is a recipe for failure with precision.
So, what the better players have that the others don't is simply precision and repeatability. Doesn't matter if they have a piston stroke or a pendulum stroke. Although, it is much easier with a pendulum stroke. If you watch most pros, most of the time there elbow does not move until they make contact with the cb. What happens after that is immaterial to the shot. The after results are only useful for helping to backpedal to see what went wrong or right before the shot was actually taken.
For the angle of attack, you will see that almost every person that even plays decent tries to keep the cue as level as possible. A few may have a slightly elevated cue in the back, but as long as they consistently do it, it doesn't really matter. All it does is make the cb swerve quicker, and if they are consistent with it, they also learn when it curves for them, just like the guy trying to keep it level learns when it curves for him. Seldom can one shoot with an actually level cue, so we all get some swerve when using english. (of course swerve is also dependent on speed of shot and distance until contact with ob)