Glad you enjoy it. Thanks for the offer of more coffee, but I would prefer you waited a few weeks as I will be announcing a new service, and that might be a better option for you.
I was watching a match between Khan and Chelsea on which one or commentators said "these shots win you points, not matches" on a cross court nick on serve hit Mt Chelsea. Make a video on a list of shots that win points and the ones that win matches please. Thank you!
Hello, the whole reason I created my OneShot series was to talk about "Shots that win matches": ua-cam.com/play/PLSlfdwgI6MBknx1yMdbmq3anJox0I-BTQ.html Bt the way, I have deleted your duplicate comment on another video.
Great! I really enjoyed that! ( too much "lie" from the AI - -should be better " I do not know" -or " I have no data about that" ) - what if we asked the AI for help in a topic we are unfamiliar with and received terribbly wrong answers? So, proceed with caution!
Glad to hear your enjoyed it. You are right, if we received false or even dangerous information about a topic we know nothing about, we wouldn't know. But that is true of people too. Hopefully, AI will improve over time.
I’m really struggling with my game at the minute I’ve recently started playing team squash! But I’m losing every match . I know my technique is not great but I used to be able to really enjoy it. Am i just tense over thinking it ?
This is a an interesting question, and the mental aspect of the game is often recognised but then ignored by many amateurs. The first question to ask yourself is "have you beaten the same players in non-competitive situations?". If you have, they it is almost certainly how you approach the match, if you haven't you might be underestimating how challenging it can be to play new players with styles, strengths and tactics you haven't faced before.
Might be a combination of both. After each match, spend a few moments making some brief notes on your opponent. It will help you become more aware of players strengths and weaknesses.
That was really fun coach. Time to buy you another coffee.
Glad you enjoy it. Thanks for the offer of more coffee, but I would prefer you waited a few weeks as I will be announcing a new service, and that might be a better option for you.
I was watching a match between Khan and Chelsea on which one or commentators said "these shots win you points, not matches" on a cross court nick on serve hit Mt Chelsea.
Make a video on a list of shots that win points and the ones that win matches please. Thank you!
Hello, the whole reason I created my OneShot series was to talk about "Shots that win matches": ua-cam.com/play/PLSlfdwgI6MBknx1yMdbmq3anJox0I-BTQ.html
Bt the way, I have deleted your duplicate comment on another video.
@@BetterSquash ah that's lovely. Thanks coach!
Great! I really enjoyed that! ( too much "lie" from the AI - -should be better " I do not know" -or " I have no data about that" ) - what if we asked the AI for help in a topic we are unfamiliar with and received terribbly wrong answers? So, proceed with caution!
Glad to hear your enjoyed it. You are right, if we received false or even dangerous information about a topic we know nothing about, we wouldn't know. But that is true of people too. Hopefully, AI will improve over time.
I’m really struggling with my game at the minute I’ve recently started playing team squash! But I’m losing every match . I know my technique is not great but I used to be able to really enjoy it.
Am i just tense over thinking it ?
This is a an interesting question, and the mental aspect of the game is often recognised but then ignored by many amateurs. The first question to ask yourself is "have you beaten the same players in non-competitive situations?". If you have, they it is almost certainly how you approach the match, if you haven't you might be underestimating how challenging it can be to play new players with styles, strengths and tactics you haven't faced before.
@@BetterSquash thanks for reply it’s the latter, 🙈
Might be a combination of both. After each match, spend a few moments making some brief notes on your opponent. It will help you become more aware of players strengths and weaknesses.
Practice.
Lots and lots of it.