For the full podcast check out episode 56 of The PJF Podcast
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@pjfperformance13 күн бұрын
For the full podcast check out episode 56 of The PJF Podcast! It’s a good one 🙏 kzfaq.info/get/bejne/fZaXjLJ9mMqoeIE.htmlsi=OBKlqOygTkqMvtnl
@jasonsimon494113 күн бұрын
Okay so this is why Kyrie been dunking this year !! 😭😂
@kingklutch137313 күн бұрын
Sounds right when Kyrie earlier this season made a contested left hand fading left floater beyond the ft line buzzer beating game winner
@kingklutch137313 күн бұрын
The fact that he even practiced that and then made it in game in the biggest moment is crazy to think about
@JD-ny3vz13 күн бұрын
Great advice, whish I learned this as a teen.
@saadwani917513 күн бұрын
The way the media tried to potray that man is something i'll never forget or forgive
@sagarbasnet393811 күн бұрын
@FengG0trump has no physical experience to lead the average public he’s not a candidate
@sagarbasnet393811 күн бұрын
To understand the general public is important to serve them and he’s the complete opposite
@OnceABustAlwaysABust13 күн бұрын
I take my practice airballs to the game 😭
@bucketcentral96647 күн бұрын
Grew up choking my chicken with my left hand. Something that major actually balanced out my hand equilibrium because people think I’m left handed how hard I go left I go left 75% time and right 25%
@mahri90225 күн бұрын
What?!😂😂
@bigdaddymark22563 күн бұрын
wild
@happytreefriends997610 күн бұрын
Also Kyrie was originally left handed when he was young.
@sahibrandhawa546013 күн бұрын
Thank you
@pjfperformance13 күн бұрын
You're welcome 🙏
@Elnovato09313 күн бұрын
Golden words
@zb27476 күн бұрын
You have to try try try and fail fail fail in life Keep going and eventually what you compound will bear good fruit
@jaceblom984913 күн бұрын
I've always wondered about this, does practising more difficult finishes that you might not necessarily do in game help easier finishes in game become more consistent? I find that I am still missing easy lay ups in game but in training, the same type of shot I won't miss. For example in strength training we have 'general strength' training where it has a degree of transfer to all lifts compared to 'specific strength training' where we might focus on one lift only in the exact same way which might not have as much transfer to the other variations... Does skill acquisition work in the same way? Hope that made some sense.
@antiisolation413 күн бұрын
A balance of both l. As Jordan said make ur strengths unstoppable and make ur weaknesses ur strengths
@gray_gogy9 күн бұрын
Practicing more difficult finishes definitely can translate. But they can't be mindless. For example, I find overhand layups and shots with the left hand almost impossible. But they're very easy with the right hand. So I'll work on that. I'll identify the things I take for granted on the right hand and very thoughtfully try to make it symmetrical on the left side. From the dribble to the gather to the finish. Even the spot of the court I'm working from. I'll figure out what it looks like EXACTLY on the right hand and replicate it on the left. You'll find it much harder but also much more beneficial. It seems like it should be easier once you figure out how it actually works on the right hand, but it's harder because now you'll be doing things on the left side that you weren't ever practicing before. And don't just practice stationary left hand finishes. I've found that to be very debilitating. You HAVE to practice everything together. The steps into the layup, the gather, AND the finish all at once. Don't get caught in the trap of perfecting the "basics first" as in just the finish. You have to develop it all together. And it'll feel so weird and be very difficult, but it'll definitely be so much more beneficial
@clincher918 күн бұрын
My theory is It's the same for both strength training and basketball practice, I don't even think you maintain skills when you mindlessly practice the same stuff. The brain has to be engaged and when it's not you become very good at getting into your own head and not being present. If you practice that over and over it becomes harder to get in the zone during a competition
@dondahighhh127 күн бұрын
of course it helps to a point... most of the Jelly Fam werent reallly all-time great finishers but Try going faster in practice when you do layups.
@kaderadkinsguecko4759 күн бұрын
The only secret is to work with no cheat, to improvise, and stay calm in every situation.
@swastikgrover341413 күн бұрын
This is it, you need a degree of failure to improve
@pjfperformance13 күн бұрын
Facts!
@friendlybasketball11 күн бұрын
Would love to hear the other keys to finishing that he shared.
@rubatsch17136 күн бұрын
There's another video where Kyrie explains that he divides the entire backboard into 6 evenly sized squares. He then tries to hit different layups using all 6 of those areas. Therefore, no matter where he is in or around the paint and no matter how high the defender jumps, he can always shoot, spin, float it, lay it off the right part of the backboard.
@LIlFro-13 күн бұрын
Gonna apply this to training young clients in football. Motor learning is motor learning!
@pjfperformance13 күн бұрын
Absolutely! Applies to everything 🙏
@user-or5ge9dm2g12 күн бұрын
what was the secret to his handles 🤔
@ivanmamuyac10 күн бұрын
Also another Kyrie secret he hasn’t told you : he’s originally left handed and had to play right handed in high school.
@talon17767 күн бұрын
I thought he was right handed and was forced to use his left hand to write at school so he became ambidextrous?
@suooj97211 күн бұрын
I wish I could talk to kyrie and ask him questions 😢
@cosmo-ed3gq9 күн бұрын
what questions would like to ask him? I think I can deliver them in his dream. And please no more than four questions as of now my power can't allow anything above, so choose them wisely.