Region3
Ryder Cup Winner
Here's one more example...snooker.. (putting myself on the line here Gary!!)
When someone plays a deep screw backspin shot in snooker they feather the ball with the cue tip practically on the cloth.,, if you were following instruction they would tell you to do so.. if you did, and executed the shot perfectly as per instruction, you'd probably just chip the ball off the table (bit like the bad information for hitting a fade).
What actually happens is the cue impacts the ball just below the equator.. nowhere near the bottom of the ball..
here's a video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qnc64VJoQd4 and a screen shot of the cue at impact....
View attachment 604
It kind of highlights the difference between feel and real, when it comes to instruction it's crucial to know the REAL part even though it's sometimes the FEEL part that gets something to work.
Yay!... something I know about at last!
To me this actually proves my theory above where I mentioned friction.
You can actually hit very low on the cue ball without chipping it off the table provided that you push the cue through straight and not scoop at it (which a lot of people do).
With chalk on the tip it's fine, with no chalk you're chipping the white all day long, ie. no friction.
Playing with extreme sidespin you'd obviously hit the white very wide of centre. Probably about 3/4 of the way from the centre to the edge of the ball. The cue ball will start off fractionally the opposite way but not a lot again providing that the tip has chalk and the cue goes through straight.
The golf analogy direction would be 95% swing path and 5% face angle, and that's a conservative guess imo.
It also shows another example between feel and real. Lots of people say "I can't get any backspin". As long as they're hitting it hard enough so that the spin hasn't worn off before impact, it's always because they're not hitting below centre, no matter how much they protest that they are.