I have noticed during practice that my performance deteriorate the longer the session goes on. I didn’t really take much notice until the last few weeks I have been starting and finishing with very similar routines.
What I did notice is that at the start after I have warmed up with playing the spots and a few little exercises for centre ball striking. I can get very good success with routines that require cue ball control and concentration.
However when I play the same type of shots after 2 ½ - 3 hours I am terrible.
For instance yesterday I started one of my routines playing the colours of their spots, but just playing the baulk colours one at a time from different positions. So I play the yellow from different positions to get a good position on the green, then I do the same with the green to get on the brown and so forth.
After an hour of practice I nailed the yellow, I had the height power to a tee, I could position the cue ball to within an inch or two of where I need it to be for the green.Then I moved on to other routines. At the end of the session I always practice the colours off their spots to see if I can pot them all in sequence. So last night when I put the white on the same spot I was practicing earlier, for the life of me I couldn’t get it where I was earlier, the harder I tried the worse it became. All I can contribute this to is fatigue, Tiredness or a combination of both.
I do take breaks every hour or so, probably in a 4 hour solo session I will have 30- 40 minutes of rest.
I think I need to change my strategy a bit now. I think I will split my practice into 3 or 4 areas. To start my practice sessions I will chose exercises that require most concentration such as cue ball control, then probably technique exercises, tactics and so on. A good idea would be to have short sessions like 30-40 minutes per routine too, because I have found that anything more especially for me I get tired and more frustrated when I start missing.
I wonder has anyone noticed this happening to them or is it just me, It’s probably a sign I am getting old, has any of you young whipper snappers get fatigued after a certain amount of time. It would be good to know what everyone considers the optimum amount of time one should spend on solo practice routines.
Alabbadi
What I did notice is that at the start after I have warmed up with playing the spots and a few little exercises for centre ball striking. I can get very good success with routines that require cue ball control and concentration.
However when I play the same type of shots after 2 ½ - 3 hours I am terrible.
For instance yesterday I started one of my routines playing the colours of their spots, but just playing the baulk colours one at a time from different positions. So I play the yellow from different positions to get a good position on the green, then I do the same with the green to get on the brown and so forth.
After an hour of practice I nailed the yellow, I had the height power to a tee, I could position the cue ball to within an inch or two of where I need it to be for the green.Then I moved on to other routines. At the end of the session I always practice the colours off their spots to see if I can pot them all in sequence. So last night when I put the white on the same spot I was practicing earlier, for the life of me I couldn’t get it where I was earlier, the harder I tried the worse it became. All I can contribute this to is fatigue, Tiredness or a combination of both.
I do take breaks every hour or so, probably in a 4 hour solo session I will have 30- 40 minutes of rest.
I think I need to change my strategy a bit now. I think I will split my practice into 3 or 4 areas. To start my practice sessions I will chose exercises that require most concentration such as cue ball control, then probably technique exercises, tactics and so on. A good idea would be to have short sessions like 30-40 minutes per routine too, because I have found that anything more especially for me I get tired and more frustrated when I start missing.
I wonder has anyone noticed this happening to them or is it just me, It’s probably a sign I am getting old, has any of you young whipper snappers get fatigued after a certain amount of time. It would be good to know what everyone considers the optimum amount of time one should spend on solo practice routines.
Alabbadi
Comment