Pool Bridge and stroke
Uploader Comments (poolplayinghack)
All Comments (10)
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thanks alot i was looking for this
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Thanks for the tips man. Appreciated
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Poo, how the hell u miscue so badly
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@rish000 you are miscuing because you either have a loose bridge, no chalk on your tip, or an unshaped tip....and graphite or fiberglass cues have absolutely no action, they are the worst cues you could possibly invest in
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u need to work on ur follow throw on ur practice shots. not sure if u have adjusted to this or not but u want ur tip on a regular stroke to go about 6in past were u make contact with the cue ball and u were only goin about 2 or 3 it looked like from this. rish000 dont buy a graphite cue plz they play horribly and they always have crap tips on them. and plz never shoot it through ur knuckles like that in any situation ever. open bridges account for roughly 80% of ur shots so have a good one
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oh ok thanks for advice, i ordered a panther graphite cue, to see if the surface will be smoother as with gloves i tend to miss cue since its very slippery.
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this helped me alot, a can never do the high bridges...its difficult for me. but i always had a misconception that to put a spin on a ball u had to hit it far down, or far off to whatever side u wanted to spin it, but now from watching your videos i see that all u need is very little offset. im learning alot from these vids. especially keepin the parallel with the table
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that´s it ;)
when i try a close bridge, the cue does not slide smoothly on some cues, but some wooden cues are really smooth
rish000 2 years ago
most cheapo cues will have a varnished shaft, the varnish will have a lot more friction with your skin. A quality shaft will only be varnished a few inches up from the joint and will be smooth burnished wood to the ferrule. The burnished wood will have much less friction, do not use talc, it embeds in the wood, if you have to use anything to reduce this, use a glove.
poolplayinghack 2 years ago 2