Agreed partner. Great work. On outs I always prematch practice 32, 40, and 24. Not a huge fan of "chase" the flight, you'd be sloppy and unfocused with the first dart. Will have to try the close the eyes thing. Gonna go check out your site now. Later.
For chase the flight, why not place a dart (if you have spare ones) in the board at a random double and then aim for that. If you throw a loose dart and it lands in say 3, you're not going to be throwing two more darts at 3 in a game. It's a good idea for a practice game, just needs to be more productive. IMO
Great video! Thank you so much for your tips. I’ll try to see how much I can improve from them... all the best to you and hopefully there will be some more videos coming. I already subscribed, because you definetely deserve it, buddy! ;) WELL DONE
I don't understand the first drill. Is it basically "throw a dart at the doubles bar of whatever day it actually is in the calendar"? Is that a drill, or just a way to pick a spot to practice? I was expecting something like you have to make all the numbers 1-30 either with a single dart or two, and then hit a bullseye to jump to the next month. Repeat 12x, double bull required to close out the year. That's a drill.
Brian Hi, Yes I will spend a few minutes each day throwing at the treble and double for the day of the month. So if it is the 7th of the month I throw at the treb and dub 7
What’s the purpose of throwing blind? Never in a game would that happen. As in all sports you gotta try and practice as close to game scenario as possible.
It is about the feel of the throw. I have seen some of the best including Phil Taylor hit a bull or segment they want over and over blind folded because they know the feel of the throw.
it's way better to switch your targets every few throws instead of doing the same segment 15 minutes straight. 2 reasons: 1. its unrealistic in any match, except for 20's and 19's 2. you quickly lose focus if you just repeat the same thing over and over again. You concentrate way more when doing around the clock, legs, cricket etc. and that's how you want to play and when you see your game improve.
My thoughts and I checked with some sports psychologist with the idea of shooting at the same target for a time period was the muscle memory and the visual of seeing yourself hitting that spot. it is just one of many things you should do to get better.
@haja Couldn't disagree with you more. The point here is muscle memory which is crucial, especially for someone who is still learning. Throwing at a single target is an excellent method for identifying issues with your throw and trying to refine your technique and do it consistently.
@@jello1977 yes but as soon as you lose focus, you have to swich. I know it from hours of practise myself. you hit the 20s over and over again until you don't. then you switch, regain focus and practise some other spot.
@@Gochsener Yes. of course you'd switch. I wouldn't expect people to hit single 19 for an hour straight. Practice without focus is bad practice. But it doesn't mean hitting one number for 15 minutes is bad. I know because I'm not good and using this practice has helped me immensely.
@@jello1977 I also improved with different games and training apps to over 60 average and for me, regular switching targets on all segments except 20-18 works best. Just depends I guess
I had to dislike once I heard him say, '59 left there's a couple of different ways to do this' NO there's only 1 way when in a match and that's 19 double top!