I've been playing around today with a new grip. Often, as you imply, the closed forefinger grip can get in the way, become too forceful, and throw the cue offline, at least in my experience. One way I've found today, to remove this problem and increase power, is to adopt the grip one has at the end of the shot, at the start of the shot, with most of the hand in contact with the cue. In my case, the forefinginger second joint protrudes a bit compared to those of the other finger. My thumb palm is flat on the cue, and the heel of the hand just touches the bottom right top corner of the butt, while the little finger tip just touching the underside of the cue. V down the middle of course. There's a lot of contact on the chamfer.
With this grip, the cue hand is quite forward, not perpendicular; the forearm makes an obtuse angle to the table. The forefinger and thumb point point forwards, not down. The back fingers open and feather easily, but aren't as open on the feathers as a regular grip, it's quite a minimal grip for what's involved in actual movement. It's a shorter travel on the shot, but because the cue hand is inclined, appears to slip through the cue ball. The 2nd and 3rd fingers do the work. On the pool table, I've generated amazing power. Power is grand, because the more cue hand power you have, the less the tendency to do an Alex Higgins and get the arm, shoulder and everything else into the shot to get the cue ball moving. I'm sure some folk must use this grip. I need to try it on a snooker table as a proper test. What's your opinion Terry?
With this grip, the cue hand is quite forward, not perpendicular; the forearm makes an obtuse angle to the table. The forefinger and thumb point point forwards, not down. The back fingers open and feather easily, but aren't as open on the feathers as a regular grip, it's quite a minimal grip for what's involved in actual movement. It's a shorter travel on the shot, but because the cue hand is inclined, appears to slip through the cue ball. The 2nd and 3rd fingers do the work. On the pool table, I've generated amazing power. Power is grand, because the more cue hand power you have, the less the tendency to do an Alex Higgins and get the arm, shoulder and everything else into the shot to get the cue ball moving. I'm sure some folk must use this grip. I need to try it on a snooker table as a proper test. What's your opinion Terry?
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