V1 Pro Billiard Instruction Perfect Stance & Stroke Video Analysis
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All Comments (17)
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Well Said!
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I understand the principle. It is just this very thing that began to creep into my stroke several months ago. I am just learning to use it in a more deliberately aware fashion so that it becomes more unconcious and better regulated. The action on the cue ball increases so much that the whole approach to the game has got to be re-learned. Thanks
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The grip (rear hand) isn't releasing. The pressure of the grip stay's the same, the forward motion of the cue is a result of forward momentum of the cue. The cue stops at the end due to the cue being wider at the butt. The Forward Slip Cue occurs after impact ( 4" past) with the cue ball, not at perpendicular.
Slow motion details seen on Volume 6 "The Finer Points".
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There is a bit of your stroke that you have not communicated. On the final stroke at about perpendicular your rear hand releases the cue and it slides forward into the followthrough of it's own accord. Probably difficult to learn to trust but the effort to learn this effortless tecknique is probably well worth the effort.
how much do you charege 4 lessons and where r u located
ki21826 1 year ago
@ki21826
Please see website billiardinstruction
Academy of the Cueing Arts
website on logo at end of video
Cue School page
Thank you
BilliardInstruction 1 year ago
Very good, but when he draw his cue before taking the shot, his elbow should of dropped at most an inch, From this video it looks the same, so when the cue does through the object ball the tip will rise. All is a good guide to all players Well done!
Mrthiennnn 1 year ago
Thank you the comment! The elbow should NOT move up or down any. Elbow down = tip up, elbow up = tip down. The tip should pass through the cue ball perfectly straight on the same line as the initial set up position.
BilliardInstruction 1 year ago
Thank you for the videos. I like your methodical approach to teaching the mechanics of the game. I am curious about your opinion on the bridge distance from the cue ball. You say it should equal the distance from your wrist to your elbow. For me, that distance is 12 inches. Should I really be using a foot long bridge? And if so, what are the reasons for it?
dannyhones 2 years ago
The exact mathematical pendulum bridge distance is the exact length of your radius bone. Unless you have an x-ray to measure exact the best secondary way is this distance from the thumb side wrist to the inside of your elbow joint. This distance is from the core (sweet spot) of the cue ball to your fulcrum on your bridge. This is your centergistic point of reference for your baseline stroke size. Hope that clarifies.
BilliardInstruction 2 years ago