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From which country will the World Adventure Golf Tour Final (April 27-28, 2024) come from?


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Sweden Carl-Johan Ryner's blog« See all C-J's blogs

Under Pressure
27 Jan 2009 at 12:49 | Posted in: General | Views: 4657 | Comments: 18
”Things get worse under pressure”, at least according to one of Murphy’s associates. But to be serious, do things actually get worse under pressure? Is it harder to make the shot on lane 18 because it’s lane 18? Is the opening smaller when you have to ace it to win?
Well, the last question is at least easy to answer. Of course the size of the opening doesn’t change, that would be quite odd. But the first two questions are somewhat tougher to explain. During the years I’ve been wondering why different players play better at certain positions in a team. We are all individuals and thus we perform and react differently to different situations. If you take me as an example, I almost certainly will not play as good as a starter compared to closer. Why is that? I would like to think that I’m good enough to be able to cope with both situations, but I sort of know that it wouldn’t work out as well if I was to start. I know that I’m rarely good at the beginning of a tournament; the first couple of lanes are usually shaky before I get into my rhythm. Being shaky at the beginning of a round is not really what you’re looking for in a starter. Back in 2003 at the World Championships in Bad Münder I started out with cutting the edge of the obstacles on both lane 1 and 2, but after that everything (except maybe for a 25 on the eternite…) went well. A more recent competition in Eskilstuna on eternite a couple of months ago I made a 3 on the lightning (lane 2) and in the end I had an average of 19.5 over four rounds. Karin pointed out to me some years ago that I’m to well aware of that I don’t start that good, and that’s the reason why I don’t start good. Point taken, thank you.
Analyzing ones game in different situations is good, but over-analyzing tends to make it worse. It’s good to know what you need to practice, but you shouldn’t focus too much on certain lanes. Having the though “Now I’ve practiced here a lot and now I shouldn’t be able to miss!”, will inevitably end up in a missed shot more often than not. That’s exactly what happened to me at the EC on lane 15. I made a lot of aces during practice and made a 3 the first round of the competition. Practicing in the morning only made it worse, well not exactly, but it didn’t make it any better. You would think that I might have learned this some time ago, wouldn’t you? I did learn it in time for the Swedish Cup at the beginning of the year, though.

After taking a rather long detour from the initial subject I will try explain my thoughts on pressure. Minigolf is a game of millimetres and a tiny deviation from the correct swing line could at any point end in disaster. What can you do to prevent this tiny deviation? Well, the first and most obvious thing is of course to practice, practice and practice even more. But even practice can’t take you all the way; you need to keep your head in the game. The most important part is to be able to rely on that you have taken a correct aim. If you do that, then you should be able to play the shot even if you are so nervous that you are falling to pieces. Confidence also plays a part in the pressure shot. If you know you can do it, it will be a lot easier. I might sound arrogant, but I know that I can beat anyone in a tight situation.
To better handle pressure, try putting yourself in tough situations during the practice. For example during practice for Elitserien I sometimes play a match against Anders Wiklund the last 5 holes of a round with him always 1 shot ahead at the start. If I lose then I have to serve him a coffee. I can guarantee that this is something he enjoys. It’s a good point that we’re not counting the entire round, just the last part. I get more pressure practice and he gets more coffee, everybody wins.

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Comments (18)

Sweden Lurre (Lukas Oja) | Delete

28 Jan 2009 at 10:03
I cant see any connections between "under pressure" and forbidden shots in youth championships? Maybe you should start a new forum thread. By the way, sorry to interfear in this discussion I just couldnt resist it. :)

Netherlands Tiek (Erik Tiekstra) | Delete

28 Jan 2009 at 09:20
@JJM
That is a lot of difference... in 90% of the cases (then I mean with players and lanes) the wall-shot on a labyrinth is easier then straight to make an ace. It is pretty simple, your aim is around 1 meter instead of 5-6 or how long the course is. Same actually for the Flash, but then you have to deal with a double-wall shot leaving the margin of error a lot smaller to ace the lane.
Where I can, I always play the labyrinth with the wall-shot. You are comparing two very different things now.

Finland JJM (John Mittler) | Delete

28 Jan 2009 at 09:15
If two coaches have a different opinion about the playing strategy, it is not anything new in sports, is it? The main point is that the straight spin shot is a high-risk strategy, and majority of all players (and coaches) prefer safer game from the walls. But with some tailor-made rule changes (on this lane, and at German slide, etc.) it would be possible to move minigolf competitions to a more entertaining direction, with more variety in different playing lines and safety vs. attack strategies chosen by players, teams and evil national team coaches.

Finland HansIII (Pasi Aho) | Delete

28 Jan 2009 at 08:24
@ JJM: referring to your earlier opinions it's a bit difficult to play for a safe two on laby... How many youth tournaments have you seen lately? I can name which Finnish youth team players in the last few years have played laby straight and which off the frame, championships by championships. Yes, I can! Can you?

My philosophy and duty as coach is to recommend shots which bring the best average. Forbiddance is not the way to success, youth should be allowed to try and learn (even by mistake). Straight laby shots haven't been forbidden at least in the last ten years or so. If one had problems with a shot, talking, analyzing and training often lead to a good result, sometimes changing the shot, sometimes not.

It's not funny to see how you underestimate the abilities of the Finnish youth and ex-youth in
a) when it comes to their game
b) when it comes to their abilities to analyze the game

They have proven often enough that there are great players who can beat any of us old men in Finland any time on any system.

Finland JJM (John Mittler) | Delete

28 Jan 2009 at 06:28
@Kristerm: I removed your empty post, if you tried to write something, maybe you had some special character that caused problems, I don’t know.
@HansIII: You have never heard of any Finnish junior coach telling the players to use the wall shot in labyrinth?

Sweden Viking (Pierre Geerhold) | Delete

28 Jan 2009 at 00:10
No matter what it should be the best play that you use on a lane. If the straight shot is better then the wall shot you should use the straight shot. But if the wall shot is the best alternative thats the shot you use. In a team competition it´s the right decision too ban the straight shot as well as the wall shot depending on what shots the best alternative.

Finland HansIII (Pasi Aho) | Delete

27 Jan 2009 at 23:11
Let's hope Finland will never ever have a coach who forbids the straight spin shot or any other shot per se with the mentioned arguments. Or a coach who trusts his/her players that much.

Finland JJM (John Mittler) | Delete

27 Jan 2009 at 21:06
Hmmm.... to me it seems that 99% of players are using the wall shot to get safely max. 2 points. If I were a national team coach, I would not allow the straight spin shot to any of our Finnish heroes.

Sweden Viking (Pierre Geerhold) | Delete

27 Jan 2009 at 20:56
@ JJM, i dont think anyone is using the wall shot on the lightning so they can cash in a safe 2 point. In my case its just easier to get an ace with wall shot then the straight shot (thats regarding 99% of the shots). I havent played the straight shot since SM in Malmö in -98 or -99 i think it was.

Canada CDN (Jason Weaver) | Delete

27 Jan 2009 at 19:12
Aha... I see. That wasn't a very easy lane either. Smart. I think I sometimes tend to overtrain certain lanes and not train enough on some (ones that I think are easier or "given" aces. I have really been trying to change how I train, prepare for competitions and how I compete during the indoor season.
Thanks for the tip. Cheers!
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