I've been trying to decide lately if I should buy a jump cue or not. And this has led me into a bigger area of thought where I'm trying to figure out the best way to organize and prioritize my practice time. In other words, what should I work on now and when should I say that skill/shot X is good enough and move on to other things.
The jump cue is a good example. I'm not very good at kick shots so should I get better at kick shots before moving to jumping?
Maybe I'm looking at this wrong... I've been focusing on "depth" (i.e., trying to build up the skills/shots I have while neglecting the ones I don't) instead of of breadth, where I have approximately the same skill level with more shots/techniques/etc.
What do you recommend for your regular students?
Thanks
-matthew
The jump cue is a good example. I'm not very good at kick shots so should I get better at kick shots before moving to jumping?
Maybe I'm looking at this wrong... I've been focusing on "depth" (i.e., trying to build up the skills/shots I have while neglecting the ones I don't) instead of of breadth, where I have approximately the same skill level with more shots/techniques/etc.
What do you recommend for your regular students?
Thanks
-matthew