Re: Keep
by Raman Krishnaswamy on Aug 11, 2016 11:32 PM
You are being quite uncharitable in your remarks. Archery is just not pressing the button and releasing the arrow. There are several factors involved which have to work in unison. Here's whar Mr. Mike a renowned Archery Coach has to say: We have all had days where the arrows just go to the exact point we were aiming upon release (even if we weren't pointing at the 10 at the time :x ), and we have all had days where it seems that despite solid aim and good form and release, the arrows just don't go where they should.
One of the critical reasons I think is Slight uneven pressure in bow hand resulting in instantaneous torque of the riser upon reslease.
A test conducted involving 48 Ace Archerers that pre-shot time (pre-performance routine), follow-through time (post-performance routine), aiming time, speed of the arrow and the %variation in clicker-release time, account for 7.7% of the variation in predicting shot performance
Re: Keep
by Raman Krishnaswamy on Aug 11, 2016 11:32 PM
You are being quite uncharitable in your remarks. Archery is just not pressing the button and releasing the arrow. There are several factors involved which have to work in unison. Here's whar Mr. Mike a renowned Archery Coach has to say: We have all had days where the arrows just go to the exact point we were aiming upon release (even if we weren't pointing at the 10 at the time :x ), and we have all had days where it seems that despite solid aim and good form and release, the arrows just don't go where they should.
One of the critical reasons I think is Slight uneven pressure in bow hand resulting in instantaneous torque of the riser upon reslease.
A test conducted involving 48 Ace Archerers that pre-shot time (pre-performance routine), follow-through time (post-performance routine), aiming time, speed of the arrow and the %variation in clicker-release time, account for 7.7% of the variation in predicting shot performance
Re: Keep
by Raman Krishnaswamy on Aug 11, 2016 11:32 PM
You are being quite uncharitable in your remarks. Archery is just not pressing the button and releasing the arrow. There are several factors involved which have to work in unison. Here's whar Mr. Mike a renowned Archery Coach has to say: We have all had days where the arrows just go to the exact point we were aiming upon release (even if we weren't pointing at the 10 at the time :x ), and we have all had days where it seems that despite solid aim and good form and release, the arrows just don't go where they should.
One of the critical reasons I think is Slight uneven pressure in bow hand resulting in instantaneous torque of the riser upon reslease.
A test conducted involving 48 Ace Archerers that pre-shot time (pre-performance routine), follow-through time (post-performance routine), aiming time, speed of the arrow and the %variation in clicker-release time, account for 7.7% of the variation in predicting shot performance
Re: Keep
by Raman Krishnaswamy on Aug 11, 2016 11:32 PM
You are being quite uncharitable in your remarks. Archery is just not pressing the button and releasing the arrow. There are several factors involved which have to work in unison. Here's whar Mr. Mike a renowned Archery Coach has to say: We have all had days where the arrows just go to the exact point we were aiming upon release (even if we weren't pointing at the 10 at the time :x ), and we have all had days where it seems that despite solid aim and good form and release, the arrows just don't go where they should.
One of the critical reasons I think is Slight uneven pressure in bow hand resulting in instantaneous torque of the riser upon reslease.
A test conducted involving 48 Ace Archerers that pre-shot time (pre-performance routine), follow-through time (post-performance routine), aiming time, speed of the arrow and the %variation in clicker-release time, account for 7.7% of the variation in predicting shot performance
Re: Keep
by Raman Krishnaswamy on Aug 11, 2016 11:32 PM
You are being quite uncharitable in your remarks. Archery is just not pressing the button and releasing the arrow. There are several factors involved which have to work in unison. Here's whar Mr. Mike a renowned Archery Coach has to say: We have all had days where the arrows just go to the exact point we were aiming upon release (even if we weren't pointing at the 10 at the time :x ), and we have all had days where it seems that despite solid aim and good form and release, the arrows just don't go where they should.
One of the critical reasons I think is Slight uneven pressure in bow hand resulting in instantaneous torque of the riser upon reslease.
A test conducted involving 48 Ace Archerers that pre-shot time (pre-performance routine), follow-through time (post-performance routine), aiming time, speed of the arrow and the %variation in clicker-release time, account for 7.7% of the variation in predicting shot performance
Re: Keep
by Raman Krishnaswamy on Aug 11, 2016 11:32 PM
You are being quite uncharitable in your remarks. Archery is just not pressing the button and releasing the arrow. There are several factors involved which have to work in unison. Here's whar Mr. Mike a renowned Archery Coach has to say: We have all had days where the arrows just go to the exact point we were aiming upon release (even if we weren't pointing at the 10 at the time :x ), and we have all had days where it seems that despite solid aim and good form and release, the arrows just don't go where they should.
One of the critical reasons I think is Slight uneven pressure in bow hand resulting in instantaneous torque of the riser upon reslease.
A test conducted involving 48 Ace Archerers that pre-shot time (pre-performance routine), follow-through time (post-performance routine), aiming time, speed of the arrow and the %variation in clicker-release time, account for 7.7% of the variation in predicting shot performance
Re: Keep
by Raman Krishnaswamy on Aug 11, 2016 11:36 PM
You are being quite uncharitable in your remarks. Archery is just not pressing the button and releasing the arrow. There are several factors involved which have to work in unison. Here\'s whar Mr. Mike a renowned Archery Coach has to say: We have all had days where the arrows just go to the exact point we were aiming upon release (even if we weren\'t pointing at the 10 at the time :x ), and we have all had days where it seems that despite solid aim and good form and release, the arrows just don\'t go where they should.
One of the critical reasons I think is Slight uneven pressure in bow hand resulting in instantaneous torque of the riser upon reslease.
A test conducted involving 48 Ace Archerers that pre-shot time (pre-performance routine), follow-through time (post-performance routine), aiming time, speed of the arrow and the %variation in clicker-release time, account for 7.7% of the variation in predicting shot performance