Originally Posted by TheIslandProf
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Striking centre ball
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Originally Posted by Csmith View PostA straight backswing will make all the difference. If you pull the cue back crooked, you have to follow the same crooked path to get back to where you intend to hit the white.
The tip to the centre of the cue ball should be a given if we all have good/corrected eyesight, but getting the butt of the cue on the line of aim is more important and is purely down to placement of the feet.
Get your feet/stance right, butt on the line, tip to the centre of the cue ball, and then brain knows everythings straight so doesn't subconsciously compensate by pulling the butt onto the line on the backswing, pivoting the tip in the bridge and consequently striking across the cue ball.
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Originally Posted by 15yellows View PostWow can't believe this, thought I had this problem
Saw my coach many times and still can't fix this
Exactly same problem , nothing to do with stance
Please share stuff that you thing might have helped you and I will update too
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8yFhk4m_DZA&t=3s
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Originally Posted by jonny66 View PostI did the spots test again today, up and down and when I strike what looks like the centre of the cue ball to me, I get a touch of right hand side on it. I can strike a touch more to the left and it comes back straight, obviously too much and it puts left on the cue ball. Anyone else get this? Do you just strike what looks a little off all the time?
To share with you my own experience, I had tried this variant of the running the spots exercise, with 5-7mm gap, and adjust your stance or whatever you want to tweak, until you can consistently do it. I start off my practice with this excercise each time, if I can do it 5 times in a row I'd go on to the next exercise. And this helped me a lot.
The exercise is at 2:18:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFQ8AOLGFxE
- ThunderLast edited by thunder66; 4 May 2017, 03:09 PM.
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Hi guys,
A couple of exercises I find useful in terms of cueing and hitting the white well are,
Place the swan neck rest at one end of the table pointing virtically along the middle of the table with a cube of calk on the edge of the table and rest the handle of the rest on that as opposed to the handle resting on the wood of the table.
Now play the usual up the table through the spots from the black spot but this will now include going through the legs of the swan neck going up the table and then back through the legs again after the ball has hit the cushion and hopefully back down the rest of the table to land back again against your cue tip.... hopefully I tend to do 10 of these in a row when i go to the snooker hall and see how many out of 10 I can get.
A related exercise is set up the table the same with the rest and have the white again on or inline with the spots. But this time aim to just miss the left leg of rest (aiming not to go through the legs but just miss the left leg) play the white with right hand side and aim to hit the top cushion and come back through the gap in the legs not on the way up as i said but TOO go through them on the way back using the side you put on the white. Do 10 this way then 10 on the right side.
Just something I do sometimes and someone else might find helpful. Have a good weekend.Last edited by brookst; 13 May 2017, 07:22 AM.
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Originally Posted by thunder66 View PostJonny,
To share with you my own experience, I had tried this variant of the running the spots exercise, with 5-7mm gap, and adjust your stance or whatever you want to tweak, until you can consistently do it. I start off my practice with this excercise each time, if I can do it 5 times in a row I'd go on to the next exercise. And this helped me a lot.
The exercise is at 2:18:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFQ8AOLGFxE
- Thunder
I did the sight, approach, bend and shoot (ie no feathering, further sighting etc) just with balls scattered around the table and WOW. Compared to "normal" my success rate went up; but those I missed, missed by further. Some more practicing on the approach and just composing before playing, ie little\no feathering and in goes my first 50 (admittedly only in practice) since starting playing in January
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Originally Posted by blahblah01 View PostMany, many thanks for this Clip
I did the sight, approach, bend and shoot (ie no feathering, further sighting etc) just with balls scattered around the table and WOW. Compared to "normal" my success rate went up; but those I missed, missed by further. Some more practicing on the approach and just composing before playing, ie little\no feathering and in goes my first 50 (admittedly only in practice) since starting playing in January
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Originally Posted by jonny66 View PostAll my highest breaks have been when I hardly feather the ball and just play "naturally", but it's hard to do that under any kind of pressure. There's a Steve Davis article I found in someone on here's sig where he talks about this, basically he say's you need to find a happy medium between getting down and stroking the balls in and staying down feathering too long. That's why he's such a fan of Selby's cue action, it's the same every time, get down, 2 feathers, slow pull back, pause, deliver, every time, no matter how hard or easy the shot is.
It felt very unnatural, with no sense of rhythm\feel etc. During the 2nd\3rdsession I think I managed to get some rhythm, and I'm getting feel from striking...
I'm meeting up with EnglishBoy for a game tonight, and have Club Comp on Monday night, so I'll see how it goes.
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Originally Posted by blahblah01 View PostIt was really weird the first time I did it. Sometimes I was cueing before head was down, and the ball's were still flying in....
It felt very unnatural, with no sense of rhythm\feel etc. During the 2nd\3rdsession I think I managed to get some rhythm, and I'm getting feel from striking...
I'm meeting up with EnglishBoy for a game tonight, and have Club Comp on Monday night, so I'll see how it goes.
I have to really concentrate to feather straight but even when I don't, if I pause on the backswing for a decent amount of time (obviously it's personal how long) , I generally come through straight.
As I get more confident this somehow gets lost and I generally go through the same process again having to concentrate on the pause!
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Originally Posted by Shockerz View PostFor me it's the pause that makes the biggest difference.
I have to really concentrate to feather straight but even when I don't, if I pause on the backswing for a decent amount of time (obviously it's personal how long) , I generally come through straight.
As I get more confident this somehow gets lost and I generally go through the same process again having to concentrate on the pause!
I'm not sure Snooker is a game for over confidence, excitement etc....
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Originally Posted by blahblah01 View PostYou seem to be missing the word over in there )
I'm not sure Snooker is a game for over confidence, excitement etc....
I really meant as I get confident so stop having to think about technique which can of course be damaging on it's own; too much thinking about technique can kill your game.
I guess when I think I have drilled a routine into my method you sort of accept (rightly or wrongly) that you can move onto something else or you would always be thinking about grip, pause, sighting etc.
I just struggle with the straight cueing and always have.
but, what a great game it is!
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Originally Posted by jonny66 View PostAll my highest breaks have been when I hardly feather the ball and just play "naturally", but it's hard to do that under any kind of pressure. There's a Steve Davis article I found in someone on here's sig where he talks about this, basically he say's you need to find a happy medium between getting down and stroking the balls in and staying down feathering too long. That's why he's such a fan of Selby's cue action, it's the same every time, get down, 2 feathers, slow pull back, pause, deliver, every time, no matter how hard or easy the shot is.
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