shooting your weights

Why Using Both Arms Is Crucial When Shooting Your Weights

Written by: Todd McClure

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Published on

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Time to read 1 min

One of the great things about table shuffleboard is that you don't need years of experience to enjoy a casual game. Most competitive sports require you to invest in equipment and lessons to really hone your skills, but to play shuffleboard, you only need a willingness and a playful spirit. Now, just because a casual game can be played successfully without having a great deal of experience, there are still some fun skill builders that you can play to help yourself develop as a player. Learning to lag your weights with both hands is beneficial to both your stamina and your gameplay. First off, by using both your right and your left arm, you are less likely to wear yourself out while repeatedly sending pucks down the alley. This means you can not only play longer, but you can also keep your edge because you haven't gotten too tired. However, not everyone is ambidextrous, and most people naturally use the arm they would bowl or write with to lag the puck because switching hands feels unnatural. For the most part, that is all in a player's head, and simply incorporating both arms into your gameplay should eventually shake you of the habit of sticking to just one. If you really want to develop the skill on your own time, practice by playing solo rounds of knock-off. A longer model, like the 22-foot Rock-Ola shuffleboard table sold by McClure Tables, is good for practice because it will not only help build dexterity but also help you harness your strength and control the puck. Basically, set your sights on different foul lines along the board and switch colors every round as if you were your own opponent. Either way, whichever team succeeds, you will be the winner, and eventually be a masterful player using either hand to shoot the weights down either side of the shuffleboard table.

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