i am glad you are asking killa for permission, it is respectful, but technically, this is a public forum and you don't have to get permission but as i said, I think it show respect and I think it shows class
you ought to read "mental attitude" thread...there is a lot of reading but it is really good stuff...it has and is helping me quite a bit
http://www.foosball.com/forum/index.php?topic=2485.0I will sum up for me...I have to trust my body and not let my mind try and work itself through the mechanics of the shot...this is why when you play pick up games things go well when there is no stress and you are playing more on feel but as soon as your consious mind starts to try and deal with surrounding and situations and you try and work through your shot mechanics at the same time, it creates a mess
your consious mind gets in the way of what your body can do and it can not possibily get through all the needed detail in the time given...for me its like sorting through a large data bases looking for specific details and then trying to get them all lined up in the correct order and just when I think I have them right I start to think about some aspect of it more than I should then try and go back to the beginning of the chain and then realize I don't have all the details, or think I might not and so I go back to the data base and start the search again
some of you will probably really relate to this cycle...my consious mind fights for control and isn't going to be satisfied unless it can gather all the details, situation, mechanics, and strategy and control each one all at the same time...
however, I have believed for a many many years that the body is capable of so much if we simply let it do what it already knows how to do...recently I have been trying very hard to discipline myself to this and fighting my consious mind for who is in control...I love my consious mind but it needs to just step aside and allow my body to do- let it do all it has been taught and all that it can do even without teaching
when i do this, the results are amazing...the thread above will provide lots of detail for you and others to discover their own journey
all that aside, here are a couple practical things...
* First, pick a pull or a pushkick, don't do both right now...I am not saying never, you may be the one person who can do both in competition but for now, just focus on one of them...
* Focus on one so you can build confidence and because if you are like most people, it takes time to build the muscel memory need for a stroke...there are a ton of strokes needed just to be able to do a pull shot really well and to double that with another shot is asking too much
* Also if you choose just one shot, you can begin to catalog the different defenses you face and decide what needs to be done to deal with one style and another...even if it means you get bricked someone times, use those times of loss to train you to deal with that kind of defense in the future...if you are trying to do this with two shots it is so much more work
* After selecting your main shot, start a serious approach to building the strokes needed to master it
below is a some of what the best pull shooter ever says about building a good pull...I add this for several reasons. First, you need to see why trying to develop or maintain two different shots is near impossible. Second, to give you some ideas on building up your shot in practice...
Todd Lofrredo 1996
After you get a decent stroke, experiment with different sets. Ball very far back, ball back fairly far, Ball back a little. Ball straight under the rod. Ball in front of the rod. Ball way in front of the rod. Teach yourself how to execute a straight-middle and long from those different sets. Now after you master this, then it's time to expand and add a dimension to your game. After all you've earned it!
So now we are going to shoot a pull shot with the ball straight under the rod and the man slightly under or in front of the ball so that the back half of the man is even with the center of the ball. Learn all three shots from this position. Straight-middle-Long. You will notice that the ball stubs easy from this position but that you can also hit tight tucking middles and that the straight is slower because you have further to travel. Actually this set is slower because you have further to travel. This is why Johnny Horton shot is a little slow but very accurate.
Now do the same ball position except with your man on the back side of the ball with the front of the man even with the middle of the ball, set for a pull. Learn how to hit the Straight-middle-long from this position.. After a few days of this you will understand it better. This is harder than being in front of the ball so bear with it until you understand it somewhat. Definitely not easy. You have to spray the ball more to get it to the hole but it is much faster because your almost behind the ball already.
Move the ball back behind the rod a little and try it again. This is preferred way to set the ball on my shot. Learn all three shots, Straight -middle - long. Now move the ball in front of the rod and put the man below the ball in your set so that the back part of the foot is even with the center of the ball, again more like Hortons set.
Congratulations!! you now have a multidimensional pull shot.. Ready to improve on it? Good..Lets add yet another Dimension to your pull. This part is about stance. Learn how to shoot your favorite stance, whatever it may be. Now after you figure out what your favorite is then try a few from the body position that you caught your wall pass in. Lane pass also. I learned early in my career to shoot a pull shot with my right foot forward. I use to hit the long very good from that position and practiced it. I learned that people would leave me easy longs before I got in my regular stance.
Look how Tracy Mac stands. His body hardly moves and yet his shot is beautiful and fast. I'll bet he could hit that same shot standing on one leg after a few attempts. So stance is more about comfort than anything. Just standing in front of the rods with your right leg slightly back is probably the norm. Tommy Atkinson can stand with his right foot pointing straight sideways and still hit a great long. He is not tall, he is practiced. So work on many stances and look at the results of the stance.
Then learn the body positions that you pass in. All the shots, Straight middle and long..After this you have become a multidimensional pull shot guru! But just when you think you have it all, you can yet learn another dimension. Shooting on the roll. The thing that can put fear into the strongest defenses. Why? because now they have to block you 100 percent of the time that you are rolling the ball over and that can be unnerving for a goalie and put major heat on the other forward. Learn all the shots on the roll from many of the pass stances also.
Also, learn a quick set. But learning how to shoot from all the positions makes the set much easier because your sets don't have to be so perfect. Learn how to shoot from about a 1/4 to 1/2 inch from the perfect set also because you get many sets like this when time and nerves are a factor. Is your shot complete yet? Oh contraire Mon friar
Now learn how to shoot without moving your hand or shoulders and letting your body language give the signal that your about to shoot. . You've done it! You are now master of the pull shot Universe. What's next!?