Points To Remember
Hi Erwan
I noticed that when you get down, you shuffle the bridge around to confirm the line of aim - this is too late to do so.
To test how well you get down to the line of aim, approach a shot and as soon as the tip is on the cue ball.... STOP EVERYTHING.
With NO cue actions or adjustments, pull the cue straight back and straight forward gently to reveal where you were aiming.
When you plant on the shot correctly first time you can then concentrate on cueing rather than aiming.
You seem to have a bit of a double delivery, whereby half way through the delivery the cue seems to stop and the shoulders seem to tighten (leading to you lifting the head).
Delivery smoothly all the way through like a stone falling from the side of a building.
Keep the grip and shoulders the same tension (ideally quite loose) all the way through the delivery to keep still - as this movement IS MISSING YOU POTS as it will pull the cue off line in ways you cant predict.
I would also try twisting your bridge arm slightly to angle the hand under the cue a little more as that may give a sharper V for the cue - right now the cue seems to be pushing against the 'thumb pillow' muscle at the base of the thumb and on the left side of the cue shaft.
Clearing this away from the cue often gives great freedom in cueing and allows the elbow to bend a little more which will help anchor it onto the table bed a bit more.
At 3 mins 11secs on the first video your head is moving all over the place on that safety shot - learn to commit to one line and play that.
If you feel it is wrong then get up and start again - but ban yourself from adjusting for one week and report what happens.
Apart from that, you have a nice approach, nice cueing method and good Foto Finish after the shot is complete.
Have you had a ton yet?
Sincerely
Nic
Originally Posted by Erwan_BZH
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I noticed that when you get down, you shuffle the bridge around to confirm the line of aim - this is too late to do so.
To test how well you get down to the line of aim, approach a shot and as soon as the tip is on the cue ball.... STOP EVERYTHING.
With NO cue actions or adjustments, pull the cue straight back and straight forward gently to reveal where you were aiming.
When you plant on the shot correctly first time you can then concentrate on cueing rather than aiming.
You seem to have a bit of a double delivery, whereby half way through the delivery the cue seems to stop and the shoulders seem to tighten (leading to you lifting the head).
Delivery smoothly all the way through like a stone falling from the side of a building.
Keep the grip and shoulders the same tension (ideally quite loose) all the way through the delivery to keep still - as this movement IS MISSING YOU POTS as it will pull the cue off line in ways you cant predict.
I would also try twisting your bridge arm slightly to angle the hand under the cue a little more as that may give a sharper V for the cue - right now the cue seems to be pushing against the 'thumb pillow' muscle at the base of the thumb and on the left side of the cue shaft.
Clearing this away from the cue often gives great freedom in cueing and allows the elbow to bend a little more which will help anchor it onto the table bed a bit more.
At 3 mins 11secs on the first video your head is moving all over the place on that safety shot - learn to commit to one line and play that.
If you feel it is wrong then get up and start again - but ban yourself from adjusting for one week and report what happens.
Apart from that, you have a nice approach, nice cueing method and good Foto Finish after the shot is complete.
Have you had a ton yet?
Sincerely
Nic
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