Efren Reyes the greatest ever pool player 😊😊 has a really lose grip, he hold the end of his cue with just his for finger and thumb 😊😊and his cue action is as smooth as silk 😊😊great video Chris and best wishes!
I have a question about the "balls" I just ordered a pool set. When practising, how do you tell the difference between un intentional side and not being on the proper line for the shot? Terry K
Great great information sir, helped alot, can u guide if we shorter the length of bridge hand then should we also hold the butt of the cue further up or it will remain the same or we just have to adjust it by self
I know you personally mate congrats on worlds lol suppose you couldn't have done better lol. But you've helped so many professionals in different sports I really want to know if you'll offer your amazing services to Adrian Lewis? I think you could bring him back to the player he should be!?
Again, The tightness of grip is decided subconsciously by the body depending on how good the balance of the stance is. You should never manually control this tightness. If your stance is balanced enough and your shoulder is supported by your spine (as opposed to supporting itself), your grip hand will automatically relax because now it doesn't need to be tight to keep the cue online. The grip is just a handle. It should play no role other than golding the cue. Its a combination of your forearm and humerous which moves the cue forwards and backwards. Its the centre of vision being on line of aim which lets you ultimately hit where you intend. Instead of finding the right distance between bridge and grip to counteract the natural "S" that people have, you should try to find the reason for this "S" and then may be you will find the real answer that you are looking for. Blaming human body design imperfection is not going to help. The hand should not open to keep the cue horizontal - the elbow must move up and down (I know you will disagree wildly). Also, there is not weight on your bridge elbow. Once you sort out the stance, your body will choose a natural bridge length depending on your build.
Stop the blabbering and demonstrate, my dearest friend!! I'm sure you agree that empirical evidence counts. Love your spirit and geneuity, but all that will only be worth what one can prove in this world.
Very informative video. Please pay attention to the sound. My volume on the iPad is on 95%, and it is still pretty soft.
love snooker and you're absolutely the best teacher - thank you very much.
Great info!
This is the video which clear my confusion about my technique thank you very very much sir ❤️
Logical and intuitive at the same time. Well done!
Efren Reyes the greatest ever pool player 😊😊 has a really lose grip, he hold the end of his cue with just his for finger and thumb 😊😊and his cue action is as smooth as silk 😊😊great video Chris and best wishes!
I have a question about the "balls"
I just ordered a pool set.
When practising, how do you tell the difference between un intentional side and not being on the proper line for the shot?
Terry K
Great great information sir, helped alot, can u guide if we shorter the length of bridge hand then should we also hold the butt of the cue further up or it will remain the same or we just have to adjust it by self
CH Sir, Thank you for great content. with regards
Excellent!!
Very informative.
Amazing stuff now you need to fire the sound technician
Well done
Thank you Chris
Uma pena que o vídeo não traduz para o português!
I know you personally mate congrats on worlds lol suppose you couldn't have done better lol. But you've helped so many professionals in different sports I really want to know if you'll offer your amazing services to Adrian Lewis? I think you could bring him back to the player he should be!?
No judgement about stealing the top you're wearing but why didn't you take the anti-theft device off? 😜
Again, The tightness of grip is decided subconsciously by the body depending on how good the balance of the stance is. You should never manually control this tightness. If your stance is balanced enough and your shoulder is supported by your spine (as opposed to supporting itself), your grip hand will automatically relax because now it doesn't need to be tight to keep the cue online.
The grip is just a handle. It should play no role other than golding the cue. Its a combination of your forearm and humerous which moves the cue forwards and backwards.
Its the centre of vision being on line of aim which lets you ultimately hit where you intend.
Instead of finding the right distance between bridge and grip to counteract the natural "S" that people have, you should try to find the reason for this "S" and then may be you will find the real answer that you are looking for. Blaming human body design imperfection is not going to help.
The hand should not open to keep the cue horizontal - the elbow must move up and down (I know you will disagree wildly).
Also, there is not weight on your bridge elbow. Once you sort out the stance, your body will choose a natural bridge length depending on your build.
Stop the blabbering and demonstrate, my dearest friend!! I'm sure you agree that empirical evidence counts. Love your spirit and geneuity, but all that will only be worth what one can prove in this world.
Your discovery is worth very little unless you can practically demonstrate...
@@aravindthippeswamy yeah well, i am a disabled person. So, you can either wait for my arm to get fixed or die without ever seeing your game.
Absolute rubbish. I can hire people for $10/hour to write these fake reviews.