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Adding uncontrolled oomph is something that occasionally happens when I lapse, and always manifests as a wild throw. I just don't understand what you even mean when you say adding power in this vague kind of way. I don't believe pros are adding this unpredictable oomph into their swing to maybe gain distance as a gamble. |
Pros are incredibly accurate also when they throw very far. This was evident for example in the recent Dynamic Discs Open. Fantastic drives by McBeth, Gibson, Lizotte etc. It is a different thing when they are throwing pure distance. Then they can for example use 360 also.
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It's a scale. As a player pushes more to the max effort end of the scale the increased chance of unpredictability comes into play. It's harder to control and guide muscular and skeletal ability when you are pushing it to the max. Pros, as well as amateurs, know this. The difference is of course that the more experience one gets, the more they try to control max effort equates to the more they learn and better they become. But it's still all relative to their peers generally. It's why, in top tier play, players will only take risks according to how their peers are playing. I've seen low powered control shots when the stakes are high and the scores are close. When a player gets down by a lot but still an outside chance they are more generally inclined to try new things, play with more chance for error, take bigger risks, try new lines, tee off with more power, etc. They begin to play with more max efforts, take greater risks in the hope they will get lucky and the gamble pays off. Auto racing is the same. A driver out in front by a large margin will drive at a lower effort than max because it's easier to control. A driver behind will start taking risks, driving on that edge of chaos in hopes that the gamble pays off and he can catch up. |
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I saw that there was activity on this thread so I logged in to check it out and hopefully get some helpful perspectives on hip engagement during the throw, which is something that I'm trying to improve in my throw. I was dismayed to find that the last page and a half has been completely irrelevant to the thread topic. If anyone wants to dive into a topic that is not relevant to a given thread, please start a new thread. This has become a bit of a pattern with threads that you're engaging with, Rodeo. Whatever your intentions are (I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that you're a well-meaning person who is excited about diving into technique and happens to have opinions that differ from what is commonly accepted), please look at what the actual results are when you hijack threads to talk about your own ideas and then dig your heels in when people disagree. The result is that people can't click on a thread about "Rocking the Hips" or "One leg drill" and have any confidence that the discussion there will actually be about the hips or the one leg drill. This makes this website as a whole a less useful tool for the disc golf community, which I hope anyone would agree is a shame. So please, keep slingin those discs and have fun disc golfing, but before replying to a thread on here please ask yourself whether or not your post is relevant to the thread. If a thread is specifically about what type of feeling or biomechanical action facilitates more efficient power transfer from the hips, then advocating "max effort, muscle training, etc.", is not relevant, nor is debating the trade-offs between power and control. Feel free to debate these things in a thread where they are relevant, or start a new thread, but please respect people who want to be able to learn about the topic that a given thread was created to discuss. |
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But I agree that it should stay on topic. I think I may start a power vs. control thread, sounds interesting. |
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You are talking about your mindset and philosophy and feel and timing which is different than most others that throw further than you. Here PP is demonstrating and talking about the hip twitch as a powerful lateral move. Belief can be different than reality, but that doesn't necessarily make it wrong as a swing thought or inhibit proper rotation. Notice how she starts rotating more as she lags the arm back, so she is in fact rotating, unlike you said before, and she has more rotational momentum with the backswing or leaving the arm back behind the lateral drive off the rear leg. She isn't really trying to rotate more/faster, she just has more rotational momentum from the backswing. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lvXcIcNGgs&t=2m30s https://i.makeagif.com/media/10-13-2020/yTcLIK.gif |
Where is that drill? I never could find it.
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I'm just making an observation about the triggers in the sequence. When and where exactly does the trigger occur that initiates hip rotation? It is initiated as the lead leg is coming into brace but before the brace actually occurs. If we understand that then it is easier to understand how important the loading of a partially rotated hip is coming into brace. That load into brace becomes even more as the brace develops which then power the rotation of the torso and shoulders. It's a twisting rubber band effect of sorts that powerfully create the torque needed to rotate the upper body and turn that powerful rotational Force into throwing the disc. One must feel that twist happening from their hips up into their shoulders in a sequence to throw correctly. Otherwise it's just all arming and most beginners are guilty of that and can't figure out how to overcome that issue. I was guilty too as a RHBH player before I switched to LHBH. Most new players try to throw the disc with their arm, just like you do with your Wal-Mart frisbee. If you don't mind me asking- were you guilty too of strongarming when you very first started? Also, just curious, how ling was it from the time you first started to where you could throw 350 feet the correct way (not strongarming)? |
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