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18 contributions to Petanque Performance Academy
Consistency
What would be a good exercise for consistency with shooting, please ? Any ideas from anybody ? I place 3 target boules close to each other at any distance, as if it is in a competition around the cochonette. I pick the most difficult one to shoot at. Most time I hit, sometimes a carreau or good halve volley. The next two are off, sometimes way off. On a good day I hit the 2nd one but the third is a dud. Any other ideas to practice consistency ?
4 likes • 24d
I used to train the exercise below: - Place a jack 10-11m away from you. - place a circle as your landing spot at 6 m - Try to half lob into the circle - You can place the circle farther away of course by placing the jack farther too - Replace the circle with a boule after a while Somehow from my experience I find it much more stable to shoot in that way. Often times the technique for pointing and shooting are different. But if you are looking for what part of that movement can you integrate into your Shooting it can reduce your variance by a lot. If you are that close of variance until you miss the shot by a boule size left or right that comes down to micro management of technique and mindset in my optinion. Good luck 🍀
Giving away the game
Today I flubbed a point that didn’t look all that difficult. But… it was the game winner, in the finals, against a team we were not favored to beat. My partner and I had started a great end, and the opponents unexpectedly missed a couple, and suddenly we were holding 4 with only me to play. Wow! Make this throw and go home undefeated! In my excitement I managed to knock the opponent’s ball up, giving them 1 point on that end, and they eventually beat us. As I play more tournaments and my skills improve, I find myself in higher stakes situations more often. Semis and finals against quality competition are less uncommon. Sometimes now I’m in the shooting role or milieu, meaning that something might already be wrong when I step up to play. And when I mess up in those roles, the consequences can seem much worse because you do something that is actively terrible… instead of maybe going a bit short and failing to get the point, now I’m the guy who gives away the game by shooting the wrong ball or pushing the jack to the opponents. I didn’t completely fall apart after today’s f***-up, we did win the next two ends before they put us away. My partner was extremely gracious about it. And thanks to the rest of the team, we won the overall on points differential. But it’s not the first time I’ve failed on an important ball… and it seems hard to train under those mental conditions. I could certainly use your tips and tricks on performing as well on the game-winner as I would in a practice session.
2 likes • 26d
@John Carter what were you thinking at that moment. What was your focus ? Was it too much focus on the outcome ? Overconfidence? Too much pressure? Find the error and define a solution for the future. try to clip the scenario and store it. Eventually you’ll find yourself in a similar spot again and you can overcome it. When I was in my teens I played a lot of tournaments with my father for many years. He is very competitive to the point where he was putting so much pressure on me that it broke my confidence the moment I felt that. I still use this clipping, planning the solution for the next similar situation, store it and wait for the moment it occurs to fix it. It has helped me a lot. And still do to this day. As you can see, it’s those situations that makes the difference between a good and a very good team long term. Good luck.
Seeking help… right/left issue when shooting
👋 Hi Kevin. I am currently struggling with direction when shooting. Mostly I tend to miss shots on the left side. My Stand were always skewed to the right a little bit. When I skew my feed even a few cm more to the right it corrects that issue. I do this in tournaments as a „quick fix“ but it lasts only for that day, so this time at the training game I refused to correct my stance and just record myself. I feel like there is something wrong at the release part. Maybe something with my shoulder or timing of release. Usually I have that feeling that my hand snaps into the right position so I know immendiatly if my ball is straight or not. That feeling is totally gone. Would appreciate any feedback.
Seeking help… right/left issue when shooting
0 likes • Apr 20
@Kevin ORourke very curios about your thoughts. What did you noticed ? How can I improve my aim ?
3 likes • 27d
Update on my right left issue: 1. I have anchored my right foot in the direction of the target. 2. I am now focusing on m hand release to be in line with my right shoulder 3. I switched from 74 to 72 wich makes my wrist much more relaxed Feeling very good to finally get the stable inner concept back wich gives me so much more confidence. Before it was like I never knew if my ball will hit. Now I know it before I release the ball. This inner concept of technique is what I missed for so long and finally got back.
We win or we learn - lessons from this weekend
Reflection and hindsight is often a great viewpoint and taking the time to decompress after a difficult loss is where the greatest lessons often hide. Starting with the difficult loss. I was playing in the triples and we lost semi final to the current UK world championship squad. We went ahead and were in control but I missed 4 shots in the middle to let them slowly get back into the game. My pointing, normally a great and solid part of my game was lacking on such difficult terrains which exposed us more and led to a lack of belief in my ability to perform. I struggled with the communication issues and the fact that I thrive on positive communication and encouragement but this isn’t part of the French way. So my No.1 lesson is I have to be my own cheerleader and not get discouraged if I’m not getting the appropriate support I am used to. I also have to work on my lob and believe that I am capable of playing that shot as when I executed under duress I did play good points. Today’s singles was a different matter as singles can be an evil game. I won against the young Manche shooter who is like a machine and topped the league with 3 wins. I went into the main and played a 95% perfect game with every shot a perfect carreau and sublime pointing. Win that game 13/1 to go into the last 8. Then got out on the most difficult piste against a former partner from Algeria and an outstanding player. I lost to the terrain first and then the player. This is where my game needs LOTS of work to be able to compete on awful terrain and with confidence. In general I was happy but there are always lessons and to go from playing world class boule to a huge disappointment and loss is difficult and will need work.
0 likes • 27d
@Paul Cornwell every high lob is prone to error no matter how good your technique is i think. The difference between a perfect lob and one that is 1 m too short or too long is such a fine line.
Very interesting game with terrible tactics in my opinion
I file d this and would like you to watch the end from minute 32.40 just for that end and say what you would have done. I discussed this in depth afterwards and the teams just couldn’t agree as they were set in their mindset https://youtu.be/1wIAd3r1850?is=tmTFR_OuYbm28c1U
2 likes • Apr 21
I watched it from the beginning to get context. The shooter from team Green doesn’t hit well in this game. It’s probably a lack of confidence in shooting as well. Also, the mister may be thinking „damn it, it’s not that hard to get the point“. But yes, definitely a shot. If not the first than after the second throw at least once. I’d rather lose a game because I didn’t perform well than because of tactical mistakes. That used to bother me a lot.
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Rick Bergmann
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@rick-bergmann-5821
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Active 2d ago
Joined Feb 4, 2026