Coaches, why practice shooting while sitting?
Exactly. You want the mechanics of your release to be unaffected by your jump or whatever your legs have to do to get the shot off. I like that she’s also reinforcing a high release point. Many players aren’t strong enough in the arms (especially the forearms and wrists) to do this beyond the midrange. The great perimeter shooters, like Azzi, maintain the same mechanics wherever they are.Just a guess. She’s focusing on grooving the mechanics of her release so they’re consistent every time. That’s what makes. Azzi, Azzi. Her upper body mechanics when shooting are astonishingly consistent.
Coaches, why practice shooting while sitting?
Coaches, why practice shooting while sitting?
Well I think that explains it.Sorry to disagree:
I always thought a one-handed shot should start through leg motion...the whole motion being a balletic dip and rise up gracefully ...with the upper body and arms playing a much lesser role...until the wrist
Back in the dark ages (50's)
That's the way Carl Braun of the Knicks and Bill Sharman of the Celtics described it...
I (not very athletic) followed their instruction assiduously...and learned to shoot it that way with a minimum of velocity and a gentle spin...
Still do...
Similarly, there was the UNDERHANDED two-handed foul shot. It would've been difficult sitting on that box, n-'est ce pas?Back in the 50s a very common shot was the two handed set shot. Maybe Yanna is just expressing her creativity developing the sit shot!
Sorry to disagree:
I always thought a one-handed shot should start through leg motion...the whole motion being a balletic dip and rise up gracefully ...with the upper body and arms playing a much lesser role...until the wrist
Back in the dark ages (50's)
That's the way Carl Braun of the Knicks and Bill Sharman of the Celtics described it...
I (not very athletic) followed their instruction assiduously...and learned to shoot it that way with a minimum of velocity and a gentle spin...
True, no matter how good ur muscle memory in ur arm and wrist (mechanics) are, nothing kills a jumpsuit like tired legs.I do this with my kids.only different with my workouts youll shoot while getting up to help with legs strength. For her form also and It's so they can use to that squat position. When you shoot its just not arm's legs are key to shooting midrange and long distance shots.
for the same reasons one would have a quarterback get down on his kneet to practice throwing. strength, accuracy mechanicsThe comparisons to Azzi's fundamental are interesting here, as are the mechanics of the shot release in combination with wehat your legs have to do with the shot. It seems to me that Ayanna and Azzi are at different extremes regarding the mechanics. Azzi moves quickly but also smoothly and when she rises up for a shot her body is almost always under control.
Ayanna's moves are generally very fast and strong but not under control. She has relied so much on her physical ability, but in terms of slowing things down a little, learning how to read the defensive player, shielding the ball from the defender, and using deception and fakes, she is pretty much at ground zero. In high school she could succeed just with her physical superiority, but not anymore.?l
As a young kid I had several eye muscle operations to correct a wondering eye. I recall finding myself surprised to be about three feet to one side as I saw it drop, when fielding a fly ball. Years later I was told by an ophthalmologist that I alternated eyes so as not to have double vision and despite 'failing the depth perception test' I seemed to have adapted to have 'my own sense of depth perception'. As an adult at an optometrist, during an eye test I was asked what I did for a living and I responded that I was a carpenter - she quipped that there was no way I could hit a nail with my lack of depth perception! I responded that I none the less seem to hit it every time. Perhaps, Ayanna has made similar adjustments to her assumed depth perception problem.I always wondered if her shot was affected by the fact that she has one good eye which should impact depth perception. This repetition should help that.