TIPS ON
BREAKING BY CHARLIE WILLIAMS
A great beak requires power and accuracy. Many people tend to
treat power and accuracy separately, but they are actually intertwined with each
other. If you have a powerful stroke, you must have good technique and be
accurate enough in order to transfer maximum power into the rack. The following
topics will focus on both power and accuracy and will help you direct all the
energy of the stroke to the point you want to hit.
The first key to a good breaking technique is good alignment.
This simply means making sure that your stroke, your eyes, and your body are
aligned correctly with your target point, which should be the center of the head
ball in the rack. Keep your eyes on the point. After the preliminary practice
strokes where you look at the cue ball and also the line of your follow through
on, your eyes should lock in on the exact point of contact of the headball for
your break. Your eyes should remain on that point from the beginning of the
backstroke to the end of the follow through.
A
superb follow through is also key. Many players fail to follow through, or do so
without confidence and force. You must come through the cue ball decisively and
make sure your cue extends well past the point where you struck the cue. An
average world class follow through will have the cue ending near the center line
of the table (a good 15-24 inches of follow through). Make sure you follow
through on a straight line to the point you want to hit. If you have a long
follow through with power, but an inconsistent line of follow through, you will
consistently miss your target. To practice this, draw a line or mark a place on
the table with a piece of chalk, and practice breaking to see if your stroke is
true to your follow through line. Also, to help you follow through straight, use
a closed hand bridge and make sure that you do not unravel your closed bridge
until after the follow through is complete.
To get maximum power on the break, use your legs to give your
arm and stroke more speed and momentum. Using your arm alone will not release
your true stroke potential. By adding the strength of your legs, and pushing off
your back foot, you will increase your acceleration and develop explosive stroke
power.
Finally, practice. There is no other way. Knowing how is
helpful but useless if you can't execute. I recommend starting off by focusing
on accuracy and follow through. Practice until you can consistently hit the head
ball full with a medium stroke stop shot. When you can consistently hit the
headball where the cue ball stops or jumps back a little then stuns, add 10%
more in power. Keep practicing and adding power until you can hit the cue ball
with 100% power and still hit the head ball with accuracy. Good luck and Happy
Hitting!
HOW TO ADJUST TO PREDATOR
When you use English or sidespin, cue ball deflection often
causes your cue ball to miss its target. With Predator’s minimal
deflection, you don’t have to adjust for English as you would with a
conventional shaft. The less you have to adjust your aim, the more chance you
have to make the ball.
Drill: To be consistent, set up a simple cut shot that you
will repeat several times. Aim as if you were aligning for a center ball hit and
see if, and how much, you have to adjust. Start with no English, and then repeat
the same shot several times using progressively more outside English. Do the
same drill with inside English and see how much you have to adjust.
With this drill, you will quickly learn how little you have
to compensate with your Predator product. You will soon realize how Predator
will take your game to the next level.
PERFORMANCE OF THE CUE
Although it is important that the butt and joint are balanced
and provide a solid feel, the shaft, more than anything else, determines how the
cue performs. The butt contributes to comfort, style and in the end provides
feedback on the shot.
AVOID BENDING YOUR SHAFT WHILE BREAKING
When breaking, most players tend to bend the shaft on the
follow-through. Wood does not a have perfect memory, therefore bending the shaft
may cause it to warp. The only way to keep a break cue shaft from bending is to
pick up your bridge as you follow through. In other words, don't let the shaft
bend on the table.