dquarasr
Registered
I have been working on my fundamentals: stance, alignment, and cuing straight.
I have tried being extremely disciplined, slow, methodical, and technical, being very careful with foot position, stance, elbow and arm position, head position,, right hand position, bridge length, and alignment to shot line.
I have also tried a less disciplined "feel it, just line it up and shoot" approach, where I trust my repetitions and let them guide me, where I am much less conscious of feet, arms, and elbow, just "letting it happen".
Here are my results (I'm talking shot making, not strategy or position play):
As my fundamentals improve, the instances of #2 and #4 are becoming less frequent, but they are still far too prevalent for me to be happy with my progress.
I know there is no "magic pill" but ideas on which approach is better are most welcome. (I tend to be analytical and methodical, however, back in my bowling days my average went up 20 pins after I relaxed and just "let it happen", and I was able to average around 210 and scored a 245-259-300=804 series in a county tournament. I almost seem to be answering my own question here, eh?)
I have tried being extremely disciplined, slow, methodical, and technical, being very careful with foot position, stance, elbow and arm position, head position,, right hand position, bridge length, and alignment to shot line.
I have also tried a less disciplined "feel it, just line it up and shoot" approach, where I trust my repetitions and let them guide me, where I am much less conscious of feet, arms, and elbow, just "letting it happen".
Here are my results (I'm talking shot making, not strategy or position play):
- Disciplined, methodical: results are great!
- Disciplined, methodical: results are frustratingly poor
- "Winging it": results are great!
- "Winging it": results are frustratingly poor
As my fundamentals improve, the instances of #2 and #4 are becoming less frequent, but they are still far too prevalent for me to be happy with my progress.
I know there is no "magic pill" but ideas on which approach is better are most welcome. (I tend to be analytical and methodical, however, back in my bowling days my average went up 20 pins after I relaxed and just "let it happen", and I was able to average around 210 and scored a 245-259-300=804 series in a county tournament. I almost seem to be answering my own question here, eh?)