a) sighting
b) errors sliding the bridge hand from standing up to the table
c) cueing across?
my suspicion is b) is responsible for this - we sight most/all pots correctly but somehow the line of aim is not translated into correct bridge hand position.
what i have tried to do is forget about stance/ getting feet in the right place, move the cue first (not the feet) and simply be as aware as i can possibly of my bridge hand and guiding it down to the baize in a smooth straight line. Result - many more pots got and also you can actually feel your bridge hand moving off line (conscious brain tries to take it off line as it doesn't look right?).
what it also means is instead of staring at the object ball as you get down to the shot you flick your eyes between your bridge hand and the object ball... or at least have an awareness of what your bridge hand is doing at most times as you move down to the shot...
i am sure a and c are responsible for some misses but i think eliminating b) or at least being super aware of unintentional deviations in b) will improve my potting %.
it would also explain why many more cushion shots are missed - presumably sighting isn't at fault here - more the fact that your bridge hand struggles more to move to its stationary position in a straight line?
am not an expert, just shooting the breeze - any thoughts appreciated...
b) errors sliding the bridge hand from standing up to the table
c) cueing across?
my suspicion is b) is responsible for this - we sight most/all pots correctly but somehow the line of aim is not translated into correct bridge hand position.
what i have tried to do is forget about stance/ getting feet in the right place, move the cue first (not the feet) and simply be as aware as i can possibly of my bridge hand and guiding it down to the baize in a smooth straight line. Result - many more pots got and also you can actually feel your bridge hand moving off line (conscious brain tries to take it off line as it doesn't look right?).
what it also means is instead of staring at the object ball as you get down to the shot you flick your eyes between your bridge hand and the object ball... or at least have an awareness of what your bridge hand is doing at most times as you move down to the shot...
i am sure a and c are responsible for some misses but i think eliminating b) or at least being super aware of unintentional deviations in b) will improve my potting %.
it would also explain why many more cushion shots are missed - presumably sighting isn't at fault here - more the fact that your bridge hand struggles more to move to its stationary position in a straight line?
am not an expert, just shooting the breeze - any thoughts appreciated...
Comment