Once again, thank you for catching my mistake. I must have been half asleep when I put this one together. I'll have to see what I can do to fix it. UA-cam used to allow notes to be added retrospectively, but I think that feature has been removed.
The following site contains my 3-dart and 2-dart out charts: sites.google.com/view/tenminutesofyourtime/home But, to be honest, I'm not in favour of using out charts. I think they can become a crutch that discourages you from learning your outs. I appreciate that not everyone is good with numbers, but if you must use a chart, try to learn from it so you become less dependent on it. Some numbers seem to come up more often than others. Get those fixed in your head so you don't have to consult the chart every time.
I hope you find the information useful, but don't be a slave to it. I sometimes choose other routes. For example, if I've been hitting well on 19s, I might try to go T19 T19 instead of T20 T18. I've recently switched to starting on T19 instead of T20 when left with 110 (I talk about it in one of my videos). I've also seen some players opt for some odd combinations to leave their favourite double. Mensur Suljovic and his D14, for example.
great vdeo, i'm a bit confused at 'double bull' and '2x25' though , the bull stays 50 value regardless of whether it's an out shot or not - it's not a double but you can finish on it! never heard the bull called a 'single' or 'double' in the north of england, its just outer bull (25) or bull (50)
I'm from the north of England, and I'm familiar with both ways of referring to the bull. I chose to go with the single/double terminology in an attempt to be consistent throughout my videos. The name is not important, but understanding the concept is. If I'm reading your comment correctly, I think you understand how the whole bullseye think works and you're saying that my explanation is a little confusing, so for the benefit of anyone who isn't clear about it, let me try to explain further... In the centre of the scoring area of a standard dartboard are two scoring segments. A small circular segment (usually coloured red) in the very center of the board is worth 50 points. Surrounding that is a circular segment (usually coloured green) that is worth 25 points. Collectively, I refer to these two areas as the bullseye. In my videos I refer to the green area as "single bull", the red area as "double bull". In the finishing stages of any 01 game, the double bull can be used as the winning shot in exactly the same way as any other double on the board. So, if you have 50 points remaining and one dart in hand, hitting the double bull wins the game. I hope this clarifies any confusion.
@@10mins it's interesting and I appreciate your reply, i've just never thought of it that way before.. to me the outer bull is half the bull, the bull isn't the 'double' of the 25 but either way it's correct and makes sense! it just took me a few mins to catch on to what you meant by 2x25 and double bull but it's not wrong! may the darts be with you lol
4:32 In the 68 checkout it says S20 D16 D16. S20+D16+D16 = 84, not 68. Can you fix that?
Once again, thank you for catching my mistake. I must have been half asleep when I put this one together.
I'll have to see what I can do to fix it. UA-cam used to allow notes to be added retrospectively, but I think that feature has been removed.
2:26 Did you mean T17 instead of T51?
Yes, it should be T17. Thanks for pointing it out, and more importantly, thanks for watching and paying sufficient attention to spot the error.
Great videos. Now I'm going to practice with these vids, but in a reverse order. ;)
Do you have a checkout chart with your recommendations we can download?
The following site contains my 3-dart and 2-dart out charts: sites.google.com/view/tenminutesofyourtime/home
But, to be honest, I'm not in favour of using out charts. I think they can become a crutch that discourages you from learning your outs. I appreciate that not everyone is good with numbers, but if you must use a chart, try to learn from it so you become less dependent on it. Some numbers seem to come up more often than others. Get those fixed in your head so you don't have to consult the chart every time.
@@10mins I understand where you're coming from. Thanks for providing these, I'll study them rather than refer to them!
I hope you find the information useful, but don't be a slave to it. I sometimes choose other routes. For example, if I've been hitting well on 19s, I might try to go T19 T19 instead of T20 T18. I've recently switched to starting on T19 instead of T20 when left with 110 (I talk about it in one of my videos). I've also seen some players opt for some odd combinations to leave their favourite double. Mensur Suljovic and his D14, for example.
Loving these vids! Thank you!
Glad you like them!
great vdeo, i'm a bit confused at 'double bull' and '2x25' though , the bull stays 50 value regardless of whether it's an out shot or not - it's not a double but you can finish on it!
never heard the bull called a 'single' or 'double' in the north of england, its just outer bull (25) or bull (50)
I'm from the north of England, and I'm familiar with both ways of referring to the bull. I chose to go with the single/double terminology in an attempt to be consistent throughout my videos. The name is not important, but understanding the concept is. If I'm reading your comment correctly, I think you understand how the whole bullseye think works and you're saying that my explanation is a little confusing, so for the benefit of anyone who isn't clear about it, let me try to explain further...
In the centre of the scoring area of a standard dartboard are two scoring segments. A small circular segment (usually coloured red) in the very center of the board is worth 50 points. Surrounding that is a circular segment (usually coloured green) that is worth 25 points. Collectively, I refer to these two areas as the bullseye. In my videos I refer to the green area as "single bull", the red area as "double bull". In the finishing stages of any 01 game, the double bull can be used as the winning shot in exactly the same way as any other double on the board. So, if you have 50 points remaining and one dart in hand, hitting the double bull wins the game.
I hope this clarifies any confusion.
@@10mins it's interesting and I appreciate your reply, i've just never thought of it that way before.. to me the outer bull is half the bull, the bull isn't the 'double' of the 25 but either way it's correct and makes sense! it just took me a few mins to catch on to what you meant by 2x25 and double bull but it's not wrong! may the darts be with you lol
Komentarz dla zasięgu.