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Author Topic: Does practicing alone really help?  (Read 1126 times)

tenpinspro

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Does practicing alone really help?
« on: August 09, 2006, 03:36:33 AM »
In talking with some fellow league bowlers last nite, the subject of practice came up and how many of us older guys don't do that much anymore or as much as we'd like.  One interesting point was brought up.  When we practice alone, we don't get transition like during league play so we can kill the shot we're on and average high but we don't score the same during league due to all the various transitions that we encounter.  So the question is, does practicing alone really help?  What's your thoughts?
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Edited on 8/9/2006 11:41 AM
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Rock77

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #1 on: August 09, 2006, 11:40:11 AM »
I feel that practicing helps only if you are working on a specific area of your game. If my spare game needs practice, I practice spares. If I need more accuracy, I practice targeting and so on and so forth.

I don't think practice is effective you are practicing to score. One should practice all of the additional elements that help your score go up.

On a side note, if I happen to practice and am wanting to strike, I try to strike from different parts of the lane on each shot. My favorite as of late is playing over 5 and using the 2 board as my breakpoint.
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KDawg77

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #2 on: August 09, 2006, 11:45:33 AM »
Not normally, but I found that a little tune-up alone with your thoughts and focusing on actually rolling well will boost confidence. Two years ago, I rolled my personal best series in practice, which topped my sactioned best by 15 pins. That weekend, I beat the personal by 2 in the state tournament. Then shot a high 6 and another mid 700 to take the whole shabangabang!
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spmcgivern

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #3 on: August 09, 2006, 11:46:08 AM »
I agree that when you practice alonoe, you don't get the same type of transitions that you might get in a league.  But when was the last time that your practice conditions started out the same as a league condition?  For me, that is hardly the case.  Usually when I go to practice it might be after open bowling, after a league or who knows what.  Going to practice "scoring high" is not always the goal.  Most of my practice sessions deal more with foot work, hand variations, balance, timing, and lane play.  I can pretty much do all this with a plastic ball, some tape, and a video camera.  I rarely worry about what happens when the ball gets to the pin area, I worry more about getting the ball from point A to point B, or what is happening on the approach.

If you are interested in practicing for what will happen in a league environment, then you will have to duplicate that environment as well as possible.  This would include getting your entire team to join you in your practice session and possibly invite another team to join you to play as the opposing team.  Most people don't want to practice that long or it is just impossible to get that many people together.  If you can get that done, then I am sure the comraderie is great.
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LuckyLefty

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #4 on: August 09, 2006, 11:51:57 AM »
I agree about the transition thing.

For many lefties...not an issue.

REgards,

Luckylefty
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Brickguy221

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #5 on: August 09, 2006, 11:54:52 AM »
When I practice alone, I work/concentrate entirely on my mechanics and faults of same and ignore scoring altogeather, so what the lanes do or don't do doesn't matter as I don't care if I bowl 120 at the time. The only exception to this for me is fried lanes, but other than that, I con't care if heads are worn a bit or there is carry down or etc.

Now, if I practice with others, then for me, the practice doesn't do much good as it is difficult to keep from being competitive with the people that I am bowling with.

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FastTracker33

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #6 on: August 09, 2006, 04:45:05 PM »
Physycally i can bowl better with 1 or 2 more people around, and Mentally i bowl better by myself
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bowl400

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #7 on: August 09, 2006, 04:57:27 PM »
at least for me, it is easier to practice alone.  like others have said, i usually work on specific skills.  also, if i had to wait for a group of people to practice, it would never happen.  most of my friends consider practice to be a chore to be avoided at all costs or they just can't be bothered.

shipper50

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #8 on: August 09, 2006, 05:38:20 PM »
I feel us older guys need to keep the muscles and joints loose, so taking time to practice alone does that for me. I am not rushing, I can work on things I need to work on. I don't normally keep score for the first game or 2, until I feel what I worked on is feeling right.

I do agree that not having carry down and others bowling on the pair will affect how my ball reacts and carries. But we all know scores in practice doesn't count, now does it?

Shipper

clintdaley

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #9 on: August 09, 2006, 05:39:13 PM »
I have not practiced for score in a few years...always working on repeating shots and being consistant with my timing and feet....

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Gunny

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Re: Does practicing alone really help?
« Reply #10 on: August 09, 2006, 08:10:18 PM »
my practice days are focused on timing, mechanics, release
ball speed and so on.  dont really focus on score.  just
on making consistent shots.  when i get a good read of the
lanes i start picturing a shot in my head, the reaction i should
get and where i want the end result.  i try and play 3 different
shots whith each of my balls before i end my day, utilizing hand
position, release, where i stand, open shoulder or square.  sometimes
different things work on different occasions, and i like to try
them all.  if you can read the lanes and know how to move left and
right, spares are easy.