Dump Adjustments

Addresing Your Weakness

by Ben van Heuvelen

A good offense should be able to reset against even a very good defense. If we're having trouble resetting, chances are that we're suffering from a problem of our own making: either A. The design of our reset protocol is flawed; or B. We're executing it poorly. †

A. There are many effective ways to reset a disc, but any effective way will probably have these elements:

B. Several common execution problems:

N.B. All of these execution problems are also likely symptoms of player fatigue and/or inadequate physical conditioning.

In our hypothetical elimination game, we need to ask what the single biggest reason is that they're able to defend our resets well. ("Single biggest," I say, because not even the most coachable player can implement more than one big change at once). Are our handlers too fatigued to get into position early? Maybe then we should seek opportunities to rest them; or we can assign someone on each sideline to talk to them throughout each point to remind them to get into position; or if they're defensive handlers, we make sure they're matched up on easier opponents.

Whatever the solution, if it's an in-game adjustment, it has to address the weakness that they're most taking advantage of, and we have to choose only one thing to address.

† There is a third possibility, which is that we're executing a very good strategy pretty darn well, but the defense has tailored a specific strategy to us, which is causing our miscues. The hypotheticals here get a little bit too confusing to go into much detail. As a general principle, though, I'll say that we need to adjust our strategy, and our adjustment, since it's in-game, needs to be significant yet very very simple.