been watching my dice lately in practice and alot of the time my left die ends up being my right die, and
the right dice jumps right over the left. Now i am sure there is a good reason for this but i am buggered if i know
what it is. It would seem to me to stay on axis as much as possible, each die would have to hit the table and
go right to the back wall.
gman
Replies:
Posted by: billythekid on April 2, 2013, 12:39 am
You are correct, you do have a problem and the dice probably are not staying on axis.
The problem is either that you are tossing the dice when they are splitting at the bottom while they are still in your hand (usually squeezing too hard or poor grip is the culprit), or your dice are wobbling while in flight which might be thumb placement.
Start first by gripping the dice using a mirror and looking at them while gripping. Secondly make certain that you are using the lightest grip pressure possible. If these don’t fix the problem then experiment with different thumb positions.
Be aware that all of these problems are very common. Good Luck and good shooting.
BTK
Posted by: Goddess on April 2, 2013, 1:52 am
Goddess
Posted by: brothelman on April 3, 2013, 5:24 am
A knuckle ball in baseball is created by pushing the ball with the end of your finger tips this takes away from the rotation. so when you open your hand the dice have a tendency to be pushed by the thumb also causing a wobble or taking away from the rotation.
Now as it has been said, light even pressure on the dice all the way around allowing them to pull out of your hand is the only way to go to gain any form of control.
Not allowing the dice to pull out of your hand creating proper rotation in a backward motion is like hitting a wedge shot with no back spin it will not sit down I bounces all over the place.
Even if you set the dice but they bounce all over the place it is not a controlled shot, remember you should be able to pick the dice up within a 8 to twelve inch area after they hit the wall