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BILLIARDS.

___tO_I THE "STAB" SPORTST EDITION.

" » SPEEDING THE CUE-BAIX. (By H. W. Stevenson.) There ere other means of varying the pace of the cue-ball than by striking it at different stengths of stroke. It is no secret process, but just a changing of tho common middle of the ball contact (or as near to that elusive little point a3 the average player is able to get his cut-tip on to), above ot below that mark. The one shot is known as "topping" the ball and increasing its pace, the other, "checking*' or "dragging," and decreasing the pace. Both motions play a most prominent part in good billiards. They have their special ranges and uses. The better the player, the more he is aible to dispense with these alterations of stroke and depend, by his nicety of touch, upon the'central ball contacts to alter the force and run of his ball. But he, too, is bound to use the accelerating and retarding effects, especially if he is out ot practice or out of form. The ball does for him what he cannot with any certainty do for himself. If you and I were able—which, let mc say at once, we are not—to strike a ball at one given strength, first, in the centre, next, nicely aibove this, and, a<*ain, at an equal distance bolow the centrepoint, a marked difference would be noticed in its length of travel Say you played a central or plain ball from the "D" up to the pyramid-spot (that midway mark between the centre-epot and the top cushion), with just space enough to reach there. A stroke above the centre, if you could strike the ball with exactly the same force, would carry it as faT as the top cushion. But struck at its lowest strikable limit, tha/t is, below the centre, provided the identical degree of power was put into the stroke as sent the ball to the pyramid spot and the top cushion respectively, by "plain boll" and "top" motions, it would Btop as far short of the pyramid spot as the "topped" ball had exceeded that mark. This, I think, should be pretty clear. It applies to every sort of ball movement all over the table, the high striking increasing, the low striking decreasing, and the middlo or plain ball striking acting as the happy medium between the two effects.

I It is in the "run-through" and every description of stroke where the cue-ball has to get up speed quickly, that the "topping" shot has its best tises. A ball struck aibove the centre will run further and faster than from any other contact of the cue-tip. It commences to revolve at the very moment It feels the tip against it. For this reason, there is nothing to be compared with tho "•topped" ball for following on after, and, as it were, "through" an object ball. Making more revolutions than if it wore struck centrally, it gains the maximum of speed at the minimum expenditure of force. Tlie "topped" ball is a headstrong, impulsive thing. It will cling to a cushion, or keep leaving and returning thorn in a wriggling, serpentine immanent which has its especial province in the play. The curly masse arises from the samo cause. But that stroke belongs to the higher flights of billiards, which we are not yet touching. There is really no limit to the eccentric revolutions that a "topped" ball may perform. Chief of •_*., howe-vo-, _o -_,• averago billiardist, i» tho fact oi its increasing tho pace and run of a ball in the more delicately played shots

From the middle of the ball one expects power, true running, and general simplicity of detail. It is, indeed, the "plain-ball"—tlie term which is given to it in expert circles. And it is as good to know and appreciate as it as, theoretically, simple. In practice the average player will mostly do everything else but plant the cue-tip fully (as he should) upon the shimmering centre point of his ball. It is really not an easy thing to do, simple as the action would appear to be. The professionals vary in their styles of taking aim, some aiming direct, where they wish the cue tip to strike, and others aim at the very base of the ball, where it rests upon the cloth. These last hold to an old-fashioned theory that with the circle of ivory tapering away, as".it does, to almost the pin's point that it rest 3 upon, the centre is more easily found that aiming at the broad face of the ball. There is soma truth in tho contention, but what is gained in a central aim is lost in accuracy of stroke, for the cue head has to be brought upwards with the swing of the arm, an action that cannot, in the long run, compare in effectiveness with the direct aim and piston-rod swing of the cue.

A "topped" ball gathers speed instantaneously, or "gets into its running straight away" (as sprinters say), because it commences to revolve "with the blow from the cue. It is just like a bicycle wheel: the nearer the driving power is to the top, the quicker and longer the turn over. A ball struck at the centre does not immediately start to revolve. It skids or slides a certain distance along the cloth, according to the force of the stroke. This sliding movement lasts only for a bare fraction of a second, but this makes all the difference to its after run. Not only that, for should the ball come in contact at all fully with an object ball during the sliding process, it can make no headway. Try a close run-through with a miufdle of the ball stroke, and notice how dead the cue-ball falls up against the object-ball. Then place the two balls the same distance apart, and strike the playing ball nicely and crisply above the centre. Mark the different effect now produced. Its quick revolutions carry it onwards and after the object-ball. The turning over and over reminds one almost of a ecre'*. fcojiiig its jvag in.

Striking the cue-ball below the centre produces a motion known as "drag." It imparts an under current that the ball does not easily shake off. Sent forward by the force of the cue, it is, nevertheless, trying to turn 'backwards by the reverse revolutions the under stroke intends to provide it with. Confused between the forward run it is making and the backward inclination given by the stroke, tho ball does neither of these things in the first fow feet of its career. It makes a comparatively extended skidding or sliding movement, which can, unlike the plain ball's preliminary skid, be seen with the eye. A slow ball with "drag" will skid or slide anything from a foot to two feet. But a fast "dragged" ball —say it is played from the "D"—will not begin to roll until it has passed the middle pocket line. All "screw," "stun," and simple "drag" shots have this same peculiarity. The three classes come within the general scope of below-the-centre strikings, and each has its own particular uses and demands upon the player. The plain "drag" shot, however, has the virtue of so decreasing the speed of a fairly strongly played ball, that it excels as a medium for long-range positions where tho balls have to be moved as little as possible. It further enables the player, in some degree, to correct the deviations of an untrue ball, which only goes astray when it rolls at all slowly. Running fast, or skidding along, while the "drag" has got hold of it, the "crooked" ball must move in a fairly straight line from the cue. This is a hint which should not be overlooked.

As the alteration of the speed in strokes forms the essence of billiardplaying, these "topping," "middle ball," and "bottom" (the general term applied to "drag") strikings will help the amateur a good deal if he experiments with them and gets the idea of the theory fairly planted in his head.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19100214.2.11

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume XLI, Issue 38, 14 February 1910, Page 2

Word Count
1,351

BILLIARDS. Auckland Star, Volume XLI, Issue 38, 14 February 1910, Page 2

BILLIARDS. Auckland Star, Volume XLI, Issue 38, 14 February 1910, Page 2