That's why the proper design, employed in all rally cars where you are doing a lot of steering and unexpected steering, is to use fixed-position
paddles. Then, the
paddles are back to being superior to a shift lever because you keep both your hands on or near the wheel.
Only a couple of manufacturers of road cars use this design (Infiniti being one) and I am always shocked and surprised when I read the universal pans of that design by reviewers. It is a vastly superior design for adverse conditions, though the
paddles can get in the way a bit if you don't hold the steering wheel in a conventional manner. I have refused to buy a car without
paddle shifters since 2002. I would always choose fixed-position ones if there was a choice (there never is).
Don't get me started on all the sequential shifters out there that are backwards (exception: Mazda). Again, check race cars where you ALWAYS down shift by pressing forward and upshift by pulling back because it matches the g-forces of your body under braking or acceleration.
Unfortunately, the vast majority of road cars' shifters are designed for parking lots and the expressway, not the actual, rare times when you could really take advantage and benefit from of manual shifting (adverse conditions or apex carving on a twisty, hilly road).