Free Play as a Means to Success

Gretzky
This is a fairly old article, but one that bears continual revisiting.

Researchers looked at perception and elite performance and found all sorts of clues that the elite see things more clearly and decisively (and can therefore respond earlier) than novices (I'd suggest Blink if you're looking for a more in-depth treatment of the matter). They also found that things like field sense are absolutely not innate, and suggest that free, unstructured play is key to getting the experience and developing a broad, flexible sense as opposed to a narrow-minded one. Check out this blog post for a bit on the difference between explicit and implicit learning--remove coaching and especially structure from the equation, and you tend towards the implicit--given that something like "field sense" is rarely taught explicitly (if I asked you to explain "field sense" to me--what to look for, when, what leads you to make one decision over another--would you be able to do it? In a way I could understand and apply?), you need to go the other way.

As frustrating as low-level, amoeba play (or loosely organized summer league, etc.) can be, or as much as you might think your disc-using non-ultimate games (I'm thinking of boot in particular, but schtick counts too in its own way) are not going to help you improve, recognize the opportunity inherent in these games. Try throws and strategies you wouldn't normally. Experiment with new positioning and decision-making processes. Expand your repertoire and your mind.

What sorts of games do you play to grow?

3 comments:

Owen said...

*admittedly, not immediately.

Owen said...

I wonder if, specifically to ultimate, there is a difference between how much you can improve your offense versus your defense via unstructured play. I'd bet that both can benefit, but I tend to think that (at least at the level I've played, which is immediately not extremely high) the best defenders are those that do have some intuition about where their opponent wants to go but mainly focus on particular 'rules' of positioning, forcing, etc. I've always hated playing defense in boot or hotbox or any other disc sport where you're not attacking an endzone because I felt like it was teaching me bad habits, a feeling I never got as strongly on the offensive side of things.

Anonymous said...

I've found games of hotbox and 10 passes help.

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