When I were but a lad I was taught that when attempting to pot a ball on a cushion it helped to put running side on the cue ball - that is, if striking the object ball on the left, right hand side. The idea was that the spin was imparted to the object ball and helped it to stay on the cushion.
I now understand that the above theory has been disproven, by using marked balls and slow motion photography (though I can't track down the evidence) This makes sense to me, and was in fact suggested to be the case by the great Joe Davis many years ago.
So does it really help to impart spin in this circumstance, and if so why?
My experience is that it DOES help - I certainly pot more balls along the cushion if I do use spin than if I don't.
Joe suggested that the cue ball travels in a slight curve, and strikes the object ball nearer to full ball in line with the pocket - but that seems to me unlikely.
I'm wondering if the fact that the cue ball is spinning makes it run along the cushion slightly as it strikes the object ball, towards the pocket, thus pushing the object ball in the right direction (not easy to explain without pictures)
Anyone got any thoughts on this?
I now understand that the above theory has been disproven, by using marked balls and slow motion photography (though I can't track down the evidence) This makes sense to me, and was in fact suggested to be the case by the great Joe Davis many years ago.
So does it really help to impart spin in this circumstance, and if so why?
My experience is that it DOES help - I certainly pot more balls along the cushion if I do use spin than if I don't.
Joe suggested that the cue ball travels in a slight curve, and strikes the object ball nearer to full ball in line with the pocket - but that seems to me unlikely.
I'm wondering if the fact that the cue ball is spinning makes it run along the cushion slightly as it strikes the object ball, towards the pocket, thus pushing the object ball in the right direction (not easy to explain without pictures)
Anyone got any thoughts on this?
Comment