Any tips on getting tournament ready? Me and a buddy have been focusing on it for a month or so. Any things to do or focus on in the last 3 days? I think we're setting pretty solid right now, nothing glaring to hold us back. How does one transition from tournament practice into getting set for the event?
We're not looking for any magic pool pills or anything, just some tips on playing up to our abilities and what we should be focusing on in the home stretch.
The mindset of planning for a tournament extends beyond the tournament itself to the difference at the practice table.
Skill development, areas of concern and physical game evolution no longer drive the decision making.
This is battle preparation.
As a famous Pogo cartoon stated “we have met the enemy, and they is us”.
Reality check.
During a regular league night anyone can beat anyone.
A tournament win has better odds.
Over 90% of players choke at some point as the importance of the game/shot/match increases.
Mentally sort through the field to pick the remainder, they are your true opponents.
I had a player practicing for a tournament once, tell me he could beat league opponents but always screwed up in tournaments.
I told him the above, as a rebuttal mindset.
Then I told him to shake hands to feel for the sign of nervousness, a sweaty palm.
Probably no longer possible with Covid.
I then took him through focusing on the other player, watching for errors, signs of nervousness, tactical mistakes
There is an element of stalking prey in this, but beware of the hungry predator mindset, leading to being overeager.
Opportunity wears many hats, find the clues, success lives there.
Let risk reward odds guide your choices.
Back to the practice table precompetition mindset.
Make list of your strengths.
Polish your skills, your shiniest weapons.
Find ways to bring those weapons into the game.
The game is about finishing.
Spend time with random ball placements, play ball in hand.
Getting out when you should.
Start with two balls.
Finish then add a third, then a fourth once you succeed.
Back up a step when you fail.
Have a plan for potential distractions, from the intercom, to whatever you can imagine.
Self management is easier if you limit conversation.
Answer if asked, only needed talk is the plan,
If you find yourself inside your head, talk yourself back onto the table.
Talking out loud forces your attention into the present and outwards.
Use it to direct your actions on the table.
Chalk up then “ok, so I need to play the …, the slide over here for this, and off two rails to …so first I need to smooth stroke this…”
Control the narrative and let it control your game.
Anybody see Earl in this?