Quinntastic
Birdie Member
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2017
- Messages
- 469
So I am needing some advice with picking the correct shots when I have a very open shot. I feel strange saying this, but maybe I'm not the only one with this problem.
I HATE open shots. I have the hardest time deciphering a line to throw and how to execute it. I end up short, wide, just botch it all together. I typically throw a lot of rocs and teebirds, and I'm familiar with all of them and I can throw consistent with them when I'm in the field practicing. When I'm in the woods, having to select from 1-3 tight lines work with a ceiling, I can execute that shot fairly well most of the time. By no stretch of the imagination to I nail these shots but I feel comfortable.
So I guess my question is, how should I approach this problem?(pun unintentionally perfect) Anyone have advice to help visualize a shot without reference obstacles? Is this a pretty common plateau or should I be looking into some deeper form/technique flaws?
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I HATE open shots. I have the hardest time deciphering a line to throw and how to execute it. I end up short, wide, just botch it all together. I typically throw a lot of rocs and teebirds, and I'm familiar with all of them and I can throw consistent with them when I'm in the field practicing. When I'm in the woods, having to select from 1-3 tight lines work with a ceiling, I can execute that shot fairly well most of the time. By no stretch of the imagination to I nail these shots but I feel comfortable.
So I guess my question is, how should I approach this problem?(pun unintentionally perfect) Anyone have advice to help visualize a shot without reference obstacles? Is this a pretty common plateau or should I be looking into some deeper form/technique flaws?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk