Oikawa
Well-known member
There are many speeds at which different players step into the shot. As an example, Wiktor Zielinski would be a fast one, Fedor Gorst would be a pretty slow one. They both are clearly consistent in their alignment, so what causes the difference in speed?
Do you find it beneficial to do it at a certain speed? What is your own style, and what benefits do you see from it? Or do you find it irrelevant, as long as it isn't in either extreme?
I personally find that going slow like Gorst, especially towards the end, sometimes has the risk of giving time for my conscious mind to think it knows better and interrupt the way my body aligns to the line that I'm stepping on, causng slight errors that would steer my body away from it's natural alignment process.
However, I don't see much difference or issues between medium and fast speed, it seems like an especially fast dropdown like Zielinski's still works well, as long as you settle down once down on the shot and let your body stay completely still before shooting.
A perhaps related topic is, what "leads" the alignment for you while going down - the body, the cue or the eyes? or all or them simultaneously? or something else?
There's also a point to be made about muscle tension in either extreme, either going way too fast or way too slow could start involving some sort of tension to achieve that speed, which might cause issues in consistent alignment too, those limits perhaps depending on the person.
Do you find it beneficial to do it at a certain speed? What is your own style, and what benefits do you see from it? Or do you find it irrelevant, as long as it isn't in either extreme?
I personally find that going slow like Gorst, especially towards the end, sometimes has the risk of giving time for my conscious mind to think it knows better and interrupt the way my body aligns to the line that I'm stepping on, causng slight errors that would steer my body away from it's natural alignment process.
However, I don't see much difference or issues between medium and fast speed, it seems like an especially fast dropdown like Zielinski's still works well, as long as you settle down once down on the shot and let your body stay completely still before shooting.
A perhaps related topic is, what "leads" the alignment for you while going down - the body, the cue or the eyes? or all or them simultaneously? or something else?
There's also a point to be made about muscle tension in either extreme, either going way too fast or way too slow could start involving some sort of tension to achieve that speed, which might cause issues in consistent alignment too, those limits perhaps depending on the person.
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