Positive approach
Posted: Sat Jun 25, 2005 9:42 am
Mr. Hall, thank you for this little bit a wisdom, I think it bears repeating:
"Training should be the arena to try changes and work on perfecting technique while matches should be an avenue to evaluate how your training has prepared you for the competition. You should approach each match as an opportunity to see where you are on your path. The acceptance of performance enlarges into the acceptance of self at whatever level you have attained. Enter a match with full confidence that you will perform to your ability. After the match, evaluate what that ability is and modify your training to meet your goals."
BTW, I do make sight adjustments occasionally during a match but the critical question is the term one other fellow mentioned and that is the term "as necessary"
I tend to agree strongly with Steve that you have to go back your behavoirs, and keep analyzing those behavoirs. If you percieve you are following your shoot plan, the technique looked real good (sights aligned, smooth on the trigger) perhaps you should consider making a sight change. My tendency is that I find one of the basic techniques that I need reemphasize before a sight change.
But I take a very positive approach. It is not what am I doing wrong, it is what will I do better. If the pattern shifts slightly to the left, I think of exact sight alignment. If the pattern is down and left, I think about smooth trigger squeeze. I replay what the sights looked like, did I see movement? But that comes from reviewing my technique on each shoot during a training session and during a match and then using the results as a feed back.
Ed, perhaps this is a basic error in my training program and approach to the sport.
"Training should be the arena to try changes and work on perfecting technique while matches should be an avenue to evaluate how your training has prepared you for the competition. You should approach each match as an opportunity to see where you are on your path. The acceptance of performance enlarges into the acceptance of self at whatever level you have attained. Enter a match with full confidence that you will perform to your ability. After the match, evaluate what that ability is and modify your training to meet your goals."
BTW, I do make sight adjustments occasionally during a match but the critical question is the term one other fellow mentioned and that is the term "as necessary"
I tend to agree strongly with Steve that you have to go back your behavoirs, and keep analyzing those behavoirs. If you percieve you are following your shoot plan, the technique looked real good (sights aligned, smooth on the trigger) perhaps you should consider making a sight change. My tendency is that I find one of the basic techniques that I need reemphasize before a sight change.
But I take a very positive approach. It is not what am I doing wrong, it is what will I do better. If the pattern shifts slightly to the left, I think of exact sight alignment. If the pattern is down and left, I think about smooth trigger squeeze. I replay what the sights looked like, did I see movement? But that comes from reviewing my technique on each shoot during a training session and during a match and then using the results as a feed back.
Ed, perhaps this is a basic error in my training program and approach to the sport.