Vision/Stroke Proficiency Ratio: Why it Matters
VISION/STROKE PROFICIENCY RATIO WITH 100%/100% AS THE REFERENCE
Ideally to execute a shot, there’s 100% vision and 100% stroke. It’s not just stroke, folks…
There’s a skill-ratio involved.
Vision/Stroke Ratio
Notice that vision leads.
It’s perfect when vision can be 100% and stroke can follow with 100%.
Consider this: when two good players are playing, matches are often decided by just one or two shots. You just don’t know which shots they will be.
So every shot must have your full attention, visually and physically.
It’s much easier for the proficient CTE player to keep the vision of all shots nearer to 100% than his conventional counterpart.
When a CTE player sees a straight-in perfectly at 100% the stroke can more easily follow with a higher percentage-level stroke. But when the eyes are off, even by a percentage point or two, that visual error tends to short circuit your ability to deliver the desired high-quality stroke. The resulting ratio might be 97%/80% equaling a miss. If vision is 100% then the stroke can more easily follow with a 95% to 100% vision/stroke ratio leading to a make. When every stroke counts, you better believe that it’s your vision that’s the MVP which sets the stage for consistent high level stroking.
Conventional players can fall short more often than CTE players on the visual side of the ledger. The CTE player can hover nearer to 100% while the conventional player can fall a point or two below a CTE visual master.
When a shot or two matters, it matters BIG TIME that vision can see shots perfectly down to one tick shot after shot.
There is a direct correlation when vision is off by even a tick, a stroke can follow with a lesser percentage of stroke delivery quality.
You can FEEL shots with your vision and have a healthy 95%-99% of what’s possible or you can know that Mr. CTE Vision can up your average level of seeing shots nearer to 100%.