This is not a critique but purely an observation.
Notice that your bridge hand is very close to the cue ball, you have a short bridge and this is why your cue arm is behind 90 degrees at the front pause, this is why you pull the cue right back to your thumb even on medium pace and slow shots. The pink off the last red played off the cushion rail shows that you can indeed cue further away from the cue ball so if you want to have that 90 degrees at the front pause then cue about an inch or two further from the cue ball.
You must ensure though that your cue is long enough to be able to move your hand to the end of the butt when faced with long distance shots to enable better sighting along the shaft, so if it isn't keep your action the same as it works just fine for the shots you played in that line up. Would like to see how it works with long distance shots tbh.
Notice that your bridge hand is very close to the cue ball, you have a short bridge and this is why your cue arm is behind 90 degrees at the front pause, this is why you pull the cue right back to your thumb even on medium pace and slow shots. The pink off the last red played off the cushion rail shows that you can indeed cue further away from the cue ball so if you want to have that 90 degrees at the front pause then cue about an inch or two further from the cue ball.
You must ensure though that your cue is long enough to be able to move your hand to the end of the butt when faced with long distance shots to enable better sighting along the shaft, so if it isn't keep your action the same as it works just fine for the shots you played in that line up. Would like to see how it works with long distance shots tbh.
Comment