There is no one answer - every player will have an optimum angle of hand relative to the line of the cue to give the straightest cueing action they can.
So, listen to what THE CUE is telling us and test all different hand angles, settling on the one which gives the straightest cue action.
For clarification I usually recommend a player adjusts his bridge hand angle by bending the bridge elbow. This keeps the forearm and hand in one line which reduces tension in the body.
If you keep the forearm fixed and rotate the hand that introduces a lot of tension into the hand.
So, listen to what THE CUE is telling us and test all different hand angles, settling on the one which gives the straightest cue action.
For clarification I usually recommend a player adjusts his bridge hand angle by bending the bridge elbow. This keeps the forearm and hand in one line which reduces tension in the body.
If you keep the forearm fixed and rotate the hand that introduces a lot of tension into the hand.
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