Originally Posted by vmax4steve
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For a number of seasons, it seemed Mark was winning everything and was extremely difficult to beat. The fact that he was playing this well at that time was likely to have had little to nothing to do with his cue and technique, but more to do with other aspects of what makes sports people great at differing stages of their careers, such as having targets to aim at, desire and confidence. There is likely to be a very different kind of feeling when you become the target, lose a little desire, and the confidence diminishes.
The statement from Mark himself about how he "doesn't put in the practise" may have some relevance, but, it's not as though he has no experience to call on, or, that he is not playing an adequate amount to keep himself in good solid shape technically. He is still a professional player and to a fair extent, his life will revolve around when he has tournaments due and when he needs / wants to practise. The drop off in success happens to many, if not all, no matter whether their technique was textbook or not. The reasons for this can be debated for years, with many having their own views as to why this occurs. All we know is it does occur.
At his peak, Mark's cue was barely 57" long, which strictly speaking, was arguably too short for someone of his height. However, he has always played with this length, and has adapted to it as he grew up. Yes, this might have been part of why we see the bridge arm bend more and the grip forearm being forward of 90 degrees to the floor at address, but that's nothing new and it's how he has been for years and years. For all we know, he may have adopted the same setup even with a longer cue. Any suggestion that his success and winning may be due to the fact that he was practising more and therefore able to keep that setup working better is to do him a massive injustice. There were far far more powerful things happening that made Mark the winner he was (and still ocassionally is) at that time. Any changes in how he delivers the cue is far more likely to be caused by confidence and the other psychological issues that affect so many sports people. The idea that a simple techinical tweak could offer a route back to more correct cueing, and therefore more success, would be very much oversimplifying what is going on there in total.
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