Slow motion montages of the world’s best archers. Check out the accompanying coach cam video for all the angles and to see how your own technique stacks up. Video presented by Easton Archery - eastonarchery....
@@Moogle Actually, I have watched A LOT of Jake's videos, and they're excellent. This film is a horse of a different color: very slow motion of every detail in the draw, aim, and release routine of one of the best archers in the world today.
They do a lot for competitions and Olympics, these are videos made strictly to show the different techniques :) there's plenty of videos following the arrow, you can also find some videos of the arrows in slow-motion to see the trajectory and parabola.
@@luverneanimatics8769 no gary that string was under tension when the bow was above the target ,that was a sky draw.they turn a blind eye to it the korean women have been doing it for years
I thought I was the only one whose scope is only an inch above the arrow. I thought there something wrong with my form cause most archer their scope is 3 to 4 inch above the arrow.
the factors are, in rough order of importance #1. distance (indoors at short distance 18m sight pin is higher, outdoors at 70m it is lower) #2. poundage #3. shape of head/face (eyes high, or eyes low with big forehead, shape of jaw) #4. anchor point at your jaw #5. weight of arrow #6. draw length #7. position of windage block from your eye #8. tiller #9. nocking point
I totally agree. I assumed she had started her draw after she got close to horizontal, but she's clearly tensioning the string when it's at a pretty high angle. (Like basketball, they don't call wlaking or fouls on the top guys?) On the other hand, I thought she was a bit sloppy and dropped her bow arm early, but the slow-mo show that the bow has jumped into her sling before she lets her arm drift down. It's a must prettier shot than I expected with a smoother draw arm followthrough and bettter back tension.
It is not counted as a sky draw because the active draw happens at target height. The string movement is simply body positioning of torso, shoulder, and arm. This is why the deliberate pause before the actual draw.