I've recently found I seem to play much better if I don't feather the cueball when I'm down on the shot, I'm not sure it's going to do me any good in the long run though.
Started last week, I was 4-0 down against my Dad and the club was about to shut so I decided to try and play like Tony Drago on the last frame :tongue: , knocked in a 20 break, which is good by our standards, and won the frame. The same tactic served me quite well the other day too, I won 5-1, couldn't pot a ball in the last frame though![Frown](https://www.thesnookerforum.co.uk/board/core/images/smilies/frown.png)
The thing is Tony Drago was never the king of the silky smooth cue action was he, always had to hit the screw shots harder than the better cueists, so I don't think copying his cue action is the best idea
how important are the feathers?
Started last week, I was 4-0 down against my Dad and the club was about to shut so I decided to try and play like Tony Drago on the last frame :tongue: , knocked in a 20 break, which is good by our standards, and won the frame. The same tactic served me quite well the other day too, I won 5-1, couldn't pot a ball in the last frame though
![Frown](https://www.thesnookerforum.co.uk/board/core/images/smilies/frown.png)
The thing is Tony Drago was never the king of the silky smooth cue action was he, always had to hit the screw shots harder than the better cueists, so I don't think copying his cue action is the best idea
![Confused](https://www.thesnookerforum.co.uk/board/core/images/smilies/confused.png)
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