Originally posted by doctorhl
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I agree that lots of practice can help to lock in a stroke. But then circumstances can bring old "motor" memories back. The earliest learned skills are persistent. If they did not stick around, we would forget how to ride a bike or how to use a hammer. But as soon as we see one, our body knows exactly what to do with it.
One of my favorite articles by Dan Coyle appeared a while back in the NYT
There is a section in that article about a famous Russian coach, Larisa Preobrazhenskaya.
Her school of thought was around technique. She demanded perfect technique in her kids and started without a ball.
So I am wondering how we might incorporate visualization and off court stroke training. This can help to retrain a stroke with less exhaustion.
Extreme practice helps but I think it is most effective for a beginner. Once a stroke is established, it becomes harder to change and requires a longer horizon to get it to become automatic.
Then it requires retraining under pressure and in other circumstances. Eventually, we would use something like new environmental cues to help us keep the "new" stroke overground.
Is the "motor" memory extreme practice approach better for an entirely new stroke?
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