Throwing the first normal passes: Difference between revisions
(Created page with " These are very simple exercises with few clubs to teach how to make good throws before there is a fixed pattern. == One Club == Throw one club back and forth. All passes go...") |
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== Three Clubs == |
== Three Clubs == |
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Four hands, three clubs, one hand is always free. The beginner does all straight throws, the more advanced juggler/passer does all diagonal throws. All throws go to the |
Four hands, three clubs, one hand is always free. The beginner does all straight throws, the more advanced juggler/passer does all diagonal throws (if both are beginners, switch roles so everyone gets to practice both throws). All throws go to the empty hand, each passer throws right - left - right - left … |
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Try to have a regular rhythm. Same things to look out as with one club. |
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When this goes well, increase the difficulty of the beginner side by throwing the club at the same time as the beginner. The beginner throws to the empty hand, you throw to the hand that becomes free by that throw. |
Revision as of 15:51, 23 September 2021
These are very simple exercises with few clubs to teach how to make good throws before there is a fixed pattern.
One Club
Throw one club back and forth. All passes go straight. When throws on one hand look good, practice passes from the other hand.
- Always hold an open hand as a target for the thrower at or a bit above shoulder height. The space between thumb and index finger should show upwards to receive the club.
- stand relatively close together, nice high throws become harder on longer distances.
What to look for:
Throws should
- go a bit above head height
- touch the floor about 20-30cm behind the other person if not caught
- spin: club should still be horizontal at head height - so the club can be caught between head height and about waist height without being overspun
Posture/technique:
- hold the club in the middle of the handle. Neither at the knob nor at the middle of the club.
- hold the club, relax the arm and let both hang at the side
- arm and club should be a straight line. This is mostly the case when the region between thumb and index finger faces forwards
- let the club *hang* there. You should feel its centrifugal pull when you do the trow
- the club will turn on its own, don't add a lot of spin from your wrist, over time, that is bad for the wrists
Three Clubs
Four hands, three clubs, one hand is always free. The beginner does all straight throws, the more advanced juggler/passer does all diagonal throws (if both are beginners, switch roles so everyone gets to practice both throws). All throws go to the empty hand, each passer throws right - left - right - left …
Try to have a regular rhythm. Same things to look out as with one club.
When this goes well, increase the difficulty of the beginner side by throwing the club at the same time as the beginner. The beginner throws to the empty hand, you throw to the hand that becomes free by that throw.