Is the classic cue ball over the whole table and return to the tip enough to test your stroke?
Shouldn't a semi-pro like yourself know the answer to that?
the guy asked the instructors
thats the best you can do ???
is he someone who posts here alot even tho not an instructor???
bbb: He call s himself a professional gamer and a semi-professional pool-gamer. And if someone is *outing himself* like that, he should perhaps really know the answer![]()
I love how Fran starts a huge thread about how people who aren't certified instructors should not be able to post in Ask the Instructor and then gives someone that response. He is a new poster and maybe he can do that drill fine but is asking if there are other ways to test his stroke. Would he have gotten the same response if he had simply asked what are some drills to test the quality of his stroke? I am not an instructor but really feel that comment was out of line.
Yeah... That's exactly what I was asking... I doubt you can know if your stroke is perfect only with that drill... I don't have trouble going 5 times in a row with that one, so that's why I'm wondering... This can't be the true test of one's stroke...
Is the classic cue ball over the whole table and return to the tip enough to test your stroke?
If you really want to test your stroke, put the cue ball on the head spot and an object ball on the foot spot. Now shoot the drill. Stop shot on the cb, make the ob return from the footrail and send the cb back to your tip. If you can do that, your stroke is probably fine.
Steve
I love how Fran starts a huge thread about how people who aren't certified instructors should not be able to post in Ask the Instructor and then gives someone that response. He is a new poster and maybe he can do that drill fine but is asking if there are other ways to test his stroke. Would he have gotten the same response if he had simply asked what are some drills to test the quality of his stroke? I am not an instructor but really feel that comment was out of line.
If you really want to test your stroke, put the cue ball on the head spot and an object ball on the foot spot. Now shoot the drill. Stop shot on the cb, make the ob return from the footrail and send the cb back to your tip. If you can do that, your stroke is probably fine.
Steve
im not an instructor
but try that shot with draw instead of a rolling ball
another one
place the object ball in the pocket or one diamond up the long rail
place the cue ball 6 diamonds away
make the ball and draw back to scrtach in the corner
and for your follow stroke.....:grin:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDGvdPR_LHo&feature=fvwrel
for the straightness of your stroke with follow
line up the cue ball and object ball in a straight line to the pocket
make the ball and follow the cue ball into the pocket
more distance between cue ball and object is more diffeicult (until you get the object ball too close to the pocket , then if you are off a hair there isnt enough distance for the cue ball to go off line and not follow into the pocket)
hope a real instructor wont think this is bad advice
im trying to help and im willing to learn
With progressive practice drills you start with a shot you can make more than half the time and work your way towards harder shots but only as your skill improves. Most people will improve in such a situation just by trial and error. Improvement may be faster if they occasionally get input from a coach or instructor about any problems they're having or faults in their stroke.The only problem I have with drills like these is, if you can do them ,you have a good stroke.
What if you don't? Now, how are you going to fix it? :wink: