Damn. Q wrote up Saturday’s goings-on… so I’ll throw in my 2 cents worth.
Played some disc golf with Billy in the AM, was running late… and got there in time to see Q there working the tables.
We warmed up, and I kept it close with Q, but he managed to beat me the first game. I didn’t want him to think he was better than I, so I dropped the hammer and clobbered him the next two games. I mean… my ego is fragile, after all. We then played a couple games of straights only… which is very good practice for both of us. I thought Q’s were a little easy to block.. mostly because of his drifts were of the back/forward variety, and not the side to side variety. Perhaps it’s just my opinion, but it seems important to try to get the defense out of position before trying to hit a straight.
Eric showed up, and after a little warm up, we played our game of winner stays, 3 pts for a straight, 2 for an over, 1 for everything else.. to 100. I started out a little slow.. but it was with purpose. I wanted to score bank shots first to get them worried about it. I remember playing this last week where I was overly concerned about scoring a straight and letting one go… so I just used that to score some easy points to set up my straights later on. Q got up to a quick lead, and he showed off his best shot – a right wall under from his left side. I’m going to clearly have to watch out for this shot… it’s got the best deception of any shot he uses, and if there’s anything that makes a shot work – it’s deception. Eric continued his struggles with scoring on himself, but has otherwise picked up the velocity of his shots and has always been patient on offense. I was hoping that this exercise in really trying to cut down on allowing people to score straights would help his defense… but I’m not so sure. I went on a couple great runs, jumping ahead a dozen points at a time… and it ended in a slaughter. Q edging out Eric – who had a slow start.
The real fun came when Q and Eric started to play. I really like Eric’s approach to his game. My god, if that kid could just stop scoring on himself, he’d be pretty good. The first game, Q balanced things out by scoring on himself as well… and I think Eric’s got the slight edge in this matchup (so long as he doesn’t score on himself). Eric took the first game. His defense looked good enough, and he picked when to use his right wall under – which is coming with some force these days. The next game.. Eric fell apart. I don’t really know what happened… Eric couldn’t find the goal, and his defense went to pieces. It happens. Q rode this wave of confidence through the next 2 games and went up 3-1 very quickly. Eric was killing himself with shots on his own goal and Q had really honed in on Eric’s offense. In the 5th game.. Eric calmed down, started reading Q’s offense much better and had enough control to come out ahead… and Q started exhibiting some bad habits… like not looking at the opponents defense and not setting up his shots. In the 6th game, both players seemed to really key in on what the other player was doing, and both player’s offense seemed to get stymied. This is the hardest part for a newcomer to overcome. When you’ve become predictable, how do you change up and go to another style of attack when you don’t have another one to go to? Eric was hitting straights from center left, and right wall unders from center right. Q wasn’t setting up his shots and wasn’t looking at Eric’s defense. The game lasted forever, but Eric was able to force a final game 7. I told both players that I’d really like to see nobody score on themselves in this last game… because it was happening too much to both players. Both clamped down on defense and came out swinging. Nobody scored on themselves and the game got tied to 5-5. Q had possession and did his best with it, and brought it to 6-5. I had been going back and forth all game, so I thought Eric would tie things up and make it really interesting… but instead scored on himself. Nail in the coffin. Great set to watch… great to see each player see their opponent and adjust their defense.
Afterwards, I practiced with Eric… I think it’s time Eric expand his offense past pump fakes and a cut/rwu. Eric can hit a decent cross, but without a lwu, it’s not a potent offensive shot. I showed him what I was taught and he seemed to like working at an offset. I’d like to see him work that into some practice games, and eventually into his regular game. I think Q was able to pick out what shot was coming after a bit… mixing in some new shots will keep it fun for Eric while giving him more shots to use. I think I find that some shots are easier to hit from certain spots on the table.. and mixing in a cross where a cut is expected gives the defense too much to think about. Eric said his mind was more in the games he was winning.. and that going into his ‘baseball mentality’ helped him. It really helps to think on defense.. and Eric was helped out when he was focused. I think Eric should mix things up a bit in all phases of his game. Charge at least once a game.. take a couple pot shots… rip a forehand every once in awhile.
For Q, I’d like to stress doing intentional drifts.. knowing what you’re going to do before you do it, and developing good habits. Looking at what the defense is giving him, and drift to the correct spot… not just “push it somewhere and hit”.
Posted by fractalzoom
Posted by fractalzoom
Posted by fractalzoom