Guide for Beginners and Intermediates: Learning Foosball
This information
was taken from Robert Uyeyama and Jim Waterman's excellent
FAQ series on foosball from the REC.SPORT.TABLE-Soccer discussion
group. This passing guide is excerpted from FAQ4 v1.2a.
With the exception of html formatting for readability the
content has not been altered.
For whom is this file written? This essay
is is intended for a wide variety of players; there are three
separate chapters for three arbitrarily selected levels of
play of people who have little or no experience in competition.
This ranges from the absolute-beginner to someone who can
be quite good, but not "tournament-hardened".
This file is not intended to limit postings
to RSTS. If you have further questions, please feel free post.
We're a friendly bunch. :-)
The three chapters are as follows:
- Chapter One
is for those who have essentially _never_ played before,
or are just learning how to play.
- Chapter Two
is for those who have played for several months to several
years, but only on a casual level-- for these people, they
rarely have considered practicing, shots are impressive
only once in a while, but they certainly haven't taken the
game strategy seriously... until now... and wish to learn
more.
- Chapter Three
is a short list of advice for those who have played seriously,
even for several years, but only on a very local level.
This would include bar-players and college-players who are
considered among the best at their respective home ground,
but who have not had any "big" tournament experience.
Introduction
A fact which may come as a surprise (a
welcome one) to many is that foosball/table-soccer is played
on a competitive (read: "professional") level. There are several
"tours" which exist, and these tours organize various regional,
national, and even "world" championships! For example, in
the United States, there is the well-established United States
Table Soccer Association (USTSA) and the nascent American
Table Soccer Federation (ATSF). These organizations are manufacturer-based,
in other words they are not player organizations, but rather
promoting organs sponsored by the table manufacturers: USTSA
for Tornado (817 561-0511), and ATSF for Dynamo/Striker (800
527-6054). Contact these phone numbers for more information
on regular draw-your-partner events in your area, as well
as for upcoming national and regional events-- go see tournament
foos today!
The older tours were played on Tournament
Soccer (TS), Dynamo, and Hurricane tables in the 60's and
70's, but now the quality of the newer brands of tables has
much improved, prompting some players to label the older tables
as mere "toys". So if you haven't played on a Tornado or Striker,
you really are missing a lot, and perhaps even learning wrongly
that some things are not possible on a foosball table. For
example, the "modern" balls tend to be made of a very durable
plastic (urethane), causing the balls not to dent and therefore
they will always roll completely straight. The shapes and
even fastenings for the men have changed so that catching,
kicking, and tic-tac-ing are much easier; what is tic-tac-ing?
Imagine passing rapidly between the men on your three bar
for up to several minutes on end-- the sound the ball makes
as it bounces between the men gives this motion its name.
Other improvements include very flat playing fields, individually
adjustable table legs, smoother bearings, lighter rods, counterweighted
men, etc. Most people which switch over to these tables do
not like them at first, but within a few weeks of playing,
the verdict is unanimous: no one would dream of going back
to playing seriously on their "old" table, sentimental feelings
aside.
So the purpose of this file, and indeed
the newsgroup itself, is to promote the sport of foosball.
This particular file is important, because by encouraging
new players to begin playing, and encouraging the large bulk
of non-competitive experienced players to enter competitive
play, we will certainly make a great step towards that goal.
Happy Foosing, Rob Uyeyama (uyeyama@hawaii.edu)
CHAPTER 1
Getting Hooked: No Spinning Allowed
This chapter is intended for those who
have little or no experience in foosball at all, or for those
who wish to "teach" others who have little or no experience.
If you're reading this, you've probably
encountered good players, perhaps so good you didn't even
dream that this "game" could be taken so seriously. But it
is great fun, and you're probably also on your way to getting
hooked. This is the most important part; take the sport as
fun, and never be discouraged by any silly, competitive attitudes
you may run across when playing other "good" players. Whether
you want to learn how to beat these people, or simply ignore
them and just have fun with your friends, it will benefit
you to learn more about the sport.
The main goals which will be discussed
are: 1) Discovering what is possible; 2) Learning basic skills;
3) Discovering what to practice (yes, practice). Let us begin
with the first concept: what is possible? First of all, the
game consists of putting the ball in your opponent's goal,
and keeping it out of yours-- that's obvious. But there are
good and bad ways of accomplishing this. The most common problem
is "spinning the rods." Here are the most often-cited points
that are good about spinning the rods: 1) you can hit the
ball HARD with little or no effort 2) you hit the ball more
often; 3) because of 1 & 2, you probably score more often;
4) this method is fun and energetic; 5) if you don't spin,
you miss the ball a lot, hit it slowly, score less, and look
lame.
REASONS WHY YOU SHOULDN'T SPIN THE RODS:
1) you can hit the ball about as hard as your spin by practicing
a wrist-flick (to be described) in less than a week; 2) you
can easily learn to hit the ball more often than a random
spin; 3) you can accurately aim the ball and score, while
a spin-shot is pretty random or only straight and easily blockable
by an alert opponent; 4) you are in position to catch loose
balls if you don't spin, creating more scoring opportunities;
5) spinning can damage the table (by breaking men, pins/screws,
or damaging the rod itself). The third and fourth reasons
are the most compelling since you'll score more often, while
the first two are just ways of saying, "you get the same benefits
as spinning anyways with very little practice."
So: don't spin the rods. Now as far as
offensive play, how do you get these benefits? This is what
is important: 1) practicing your wrist-flick, and; 2) aiming
the ball. Not spinning the rods also helps you on defense,
and that will be discussed immediately afterwards.
WRIST FLICK: if you can't seem to hit
the ball very hard (without spinning), how do you do it? First
of all, try it with your right hand, since that hand will
be doing almost all shooting. Put the ball on the playfield
under your front three-man rod, in the center in front of
an open goal (lift the defending rods for an open shot). Now,
practice hitting the ball as hard as possible straight into
the goal from this position-- use your middle man and _don't_
push or pull the rod: 1) Stand slightly to the left of the
rod, and away from the table; 2) Hold on to the handle, and
don't let go; 3) Now, "forget" about both your arm and your
hand, and only concentrate on your WRIST; 4) "Throw" your
wrist as hard as you can _straight_ down towards the _floor_,
past the side of the handle, resulting in 5) your wrist snapping
downward-- since of course your hand is still gripping the
handle, the motion stops as your wrist locks abruptly-- this
is the wrist flick!
AIMING: set the ball up along the 3-rod
as previously. This time, instead of concentrating on speed,
consider your control of the aim. Observe that if you hit
the ball dead-on, the ball travels straight into the goal.
Now change your rod's position, so that if you swing (wrist
flick) straight (without push/pulling the rod), you'll hit
the left 1/4 of the ball. Swing. Notice that the ball angled
to the right. Different distances from the edge of the ball
produce different angles. Beginning your swing with the front
of the man's toe touching the back of the ball gives you more
control than if the toe begins from the air way out from behind
the ball. Now try aiming a shot into an undefended goal from
every single man on your five-man rod. You can even hit a
ball in from the very edge of the table!
Before we go on, let me mention an alternative
way of hitting a ball hard, this is called the "open hand",
or "fan" technique. Basically, you cock your rod & men backwards
to shoot by rolling the handle clockwise up your palm as you
open your hand, fingers toward the floor. As you shoot, you
reverse the motion and roll the handle back (counterclockwise)
to your fingers, which catch the handle tightly. Done quickly,
this open-close motion can result in a very hard shot. Control
with the open-hand "fan" is more difficult that a normal wrist-flick,
but it can be learned.
FUNDAMENTALS OF DEFENSE: Again, don't
spin the rods. You can only block an incoming shot if your
men are straight down, which they aren't about 80% time when
they're spinning; yet it's fairly common for beginners to
do this anyways. Why? Because it looks cool, and once in a
while, a shot blocked by a spinning rod will immediately become
an offensive shot towards your opponents goal-- neither of
these reasons are compelling. Even if you're not spinning,
don't get eager to shoot the ball: Stop the ball, then shoot
it. ;) Otherwise, you'll often lose the ball, resulting usually
in a possession and a quick goal from your opponent's dreaded
3-rod.
So, what else do you do? Your opponent
can aim the ball just like you can. Therefore, you want to
guard both the STRAIGHT shot, and all ANGLE shots. Remember
if you can draw a line from the ball to your goal, that shot
is open. Never position your two men (your middle goalie and
one of the men on the two-man rod) behind each other- if you
do, you're just blocking the same place twice, and you might
as well just lift one of the men, and your defense wouldn't
be any worse for it! Just experiment, placing the ball on
_all_ parts along the opposing 3-rod, and positioning your
defensive men to block both the straight and angle shots.
Remember if you can draw a line from the ball to your goal,
that shot is open. (Did I just say that?) Now your opponent
either rely on you to flinch and open these holes, or must
"race" you, moving the ball horizontally along his three-rod
until it reaches a position where a diiferent straight shot
(or sometimes the angle) is open. Defending against opponents
who try this latter option will be discussed in Chapter 2.
Also, be very aware that shots from the opposing 5-rod and
2-rod can also be blocked in this way-- you just have to learn
to expect a shot from these areas of the table, and block
most of the possible "lines" to your goal. Just being aware
of these "lines" and trying to block them will make a big
difference. Finally, if you're shooting from the defensive
region, remember you can still aim it, and take your time
to lift up your 5- and 3-rods (or in doubles, tell your partenr)
so that you'll never block your own shot!
WITH WHICH HAND DO YOU HOLD WHICH ROD
in singles play? 1) When you're defending against a 3-rod
shot, hold BOTH of your defensive rods (goalie & 2-man)--
Ditto for when you're shooting from your defensive region.
2) When you're defending an opponent's defensive-region shot,
you should have your right hand on your 3-rod, and your left
either on your 5-rod or goalie-rod; the latter may be more
effective at first. When the ball is in the center region,
you should have your L & R hand on the goalie-rod and 5-rod
(maximum defense). 3) Later, when you learn how to pass and
you have possession of the ball, you can stop the ball, and
switch to holding the 5-rod and the 3-rod (ready for offense
or passing to the 3-rod), and when you get much better, you
may wish to stay in this position for defense against the
opposing 5-rod or 2-rod, so that you are ready to catch any
loose balls on your 3-rod.
BALL-CONTROL (or how not to lose the
ball): this is especially for those playing on tables which
are not Tornado or Striker, and tables which are old, dented,
and otherwise warped. Ball control is much easier on the Tornado
and Striker, but the skills in this section are still essential
to learn for these tables too. To be able to use your growing
arsenal, you need to be able to "maneuver" the ball, and not
lose it. There are three exercises which are good to do, all
on the 3-rod. 1) INTERCEPTION: Try _very_ lightly tapping
the front of the ball (with the back of your toe), then as
the ball rolls back, tapping the back of the ball (with the
front of your toe). Continue to gently tap the ball back and
forth; this back-and-forth distance will be less than an inch--
the skill being learned here is to rapidly lift the man and
swing it around to the other side of the ball to prevent it
from rolling away. You will find the shape of the motion to
be a series of "C" shapes around the ball. 2) PINNING: In
the second exercise again begin by tapping one side (front
or back) of the ball, but this time let it roll further. Move
in the same "C" shape as if to intercept it, but leave your
toe lifted in the air. When the ball rolls under your man's
toe, bring it down forcefully on the _top_ surface of the
ball to "pin" it to the playing field, resulting in a sudden
stop. Practice both versions (i.e. tap back of ball then front-pin;
tap front of ball then back-pin). This develops the reflex
to suddenly and confidently "catch" a ball which is too difficult
to intercept by method 1). For example, this "pin" catch is
very useful for a ball which is rolling away at high speed.
3) BALL MOVEMENT: The third exercise is to pass the ball from
one man on the 3-rod to another, steady the ball, and again
pass it to the next man on the rod. Continue passing among
all three men on the rod. The skill here is maneuvering the
ball wherever you wish it to be along your rod. Also try bringing
the ball to a stop at various points along the rod. You will
find that the skills learned in 1) and 2) are very useful
to prevent the ball from rolling away out of reach-- try and
develop a feel for when it is better to use 1) vs. 2) to retrieve
a ball about to roll away from you. These skills of interception,
pinning, and ball-movement are applicable to all rods of a
foosball table.
Now that you can wrist-flick hard, aim
the ball, know how to act on defense, and know how to maneuver
a ball without losing it, you are hereby no longer a "spinner"!
Chapter 2
Learning that Consistency is the Key --
Resolving to Practice & Stop the Ball
This chapter is intended for players
who have casually played the game (and never took it seriously)
for many months or even years, and for those who have been
seriously playing but only for a few months.
If you're reading this chapter, you may
play the game largely to pass time while being entertained--
you may have played the game like this for a few years, even
going through a few short periods of "foos-addiction" and
taking the game seriously. Now, after all this time, you've
finally become tired of that/those "good" players still being
much better than you are and would like to know if it's worth
the effort to get that good. Answer: The effort required is
much less than you think; the keys are knowing what to practice,
and knowing strategy.
What may seem to be the answer at first
is acquiring an arsenal of unstoppable shots; this is untrue!
Although having such an arsenal isn't necessarily a disadvantage,
all you need on the 3-bar is one good shot... learning all
of the other shots will simply make you 2nd-best in all of
them, and very good at none. However one unstoppable shot
from the 3-rod is not enough either; you need a good 5-rod
to pass it to your 3-rod unstoppably. Re-learning your defense
is less critical at this point (for tips on learning a moving-defense
see Chapter 3).
So in summary: 1) choose a shot and learn
it well; 2) Learn the 5-rod brush-pass, and use it so you
can use your shot; and 3) learn essential strategy so you
can put your shot and pass to good use. All of these parts
must be performed consistently and effortlessly-- using your
best shot or pass once in a while, or having it be inconsistent
(i.e. it works great half of the time) will make all of your
effort moot. 1-3 are described in turn:
3-Rod Shot:
You should choose _one_ main shot. My
advice is choose the pull. If you play on a Tornado or Stryker
table, you can choose either the pull or the snake; on some
of the older tables, snake-shots are often more difficult
and less potent. Read FAQ6 for instructions on these offensive
weapons-- included are instructions for both beginners and
intermediates. Once you have chosen a shot, it is very important
to use it strategically... in other words _every single time_
you get the ball on your 3-rod; the point here is that your
favorite shot is also your highest-percentage shot. Having
a wide-arsenal is fun and flashy, but the "one-shot-player"
will win the most matches! Make sure your setup is the best
it can be; for example with a pull, make sure your 3-rod is
pushed all the way to the wall; if it isn't, the defense has
less goal to defend, and your scoring percentage will simply
go down!
Why the pull is good: Good shooters can
shoot the shot so fast the defense cannot race the shooter
to the hole. The pull-shot begins with the ball on the right
side of the middle-man with the 3-bar is pushed to the wall;
as you pull the rod, the ball moves horizontally, and you
eventually shoot the ball in. Remember a good stationary defense
will cover your straight shot and angle shot. By moving the
ball horizontally far enough you will be able to shoot a straight
shot to the right side of the goal; the defense will obviously
move his men to the right side of the goal. Therefore for
the shot to succeed, you must "race" the defense to that open
hole; if you have a slow pull shot, it's useless. If you have
a fast one, you can _always_ beat a set defense to the hole!
Some caveats: A fast pull can be beaten
by a set defense if the timing of the shot is predictable...
in other words don't set up your shot, wait a consistently
predictable two seconds, then shoot it-- a blazing fast "2-second
pull" is raceable. By USTSA rules, you have 15 seconds on
your 3-rod, so use your time and "sit on it"! You will also
be able to analyze the defense during this time. Also, practice
shooting the straight shot (!) accurately in the case of a
good moving-defense.
Why the snake is good: This shot begins
in a front pin in the exact center of the 3-bar. The shot
is good because it can be as fast as a pull shot, but can
be shot in both directions: the pull-snake to the right corner
and the push-snake to the left-corner... the defense doesn't
know what to defend! If these are both covered, the straight
shot is open. For this reason, the snake is most useful when
its setup is in the center of the table. Most people think
the snake-shot is easier to learn than the pull, and for this
reason some people recommend learning the snake to beginners;
people can get quite good at the shot in only a month! And
once you learn the shot, you will find the soreness of your
wrist will disappear. But learning to really master the shot,
however, is not easy either.
If you don't want to _practice_ a shot
_at all_, but still would like to score better, doing the
push-kick or the pull-kick (see definition in FAQ1) _every
time_ you get the ball on your 3-rod will improve your scoring
percentage. Why? I am not implying that these are bad shots
to learn in the long-run; many people have unstoppable push-kicks
and pull-kicks. The reason these shots are recommended in
this context is that even a medium-speed push-kick or pull-kick
can score reasonably against a good defender; a medium-speed
pull or snake is much easier to block! This is because where
you intend to shoot the ball is more unpredictable-- the ball
begins on the inside of either of the outer-men on the 3-rod
(left man = pull-kick setup; right man = push-kick setup).
The ball is passed horizontally to the middle man, who shoots
it straight in. This middle man can shoot the ball straight
into either the left or right corner of the goal, depending
on how far the horizontal pass is. If the horizontal pass
is even medium-fast, it becomes difficult for the defender
to predict which corner you are aiming for. So practice shooting
the _edges_: the edge of the near corner and the far corner
of the goal. The middle of the goal will usually be blocked
in any case, but if you always aim for the corners, you will
be most unpredictable to the defender! Also, be aware of two
more options: 1) a faked pass w/the outer man who instead
angle-shoots it toward the near corner, or 2) executes an
outer-man push or pull shot toward the near corner.
However, mastering a pull-kick or push-kick
shot so that your scoring percentage is very high tends to
be more difficult than getting to this same percentage with
a pull or a snake shot. So if you are going to practice a
shot, make it the pull or snake. If you refuse to practice,
but still want to score more, always use a push-kick or pull-kick.
And always use your best shot.
5-Rod Pass:
Having an unstoppable 3-rod shot is useless
if you never get the ball on your 3-rod! A good opponent will
do exactly this. Even if no players in your area can keep
the ball away from your 3-bar the entire game, learning a
good 5-rod pass will still do wonders! You can play someone
with a better shot, and if your pass is better, you will get
more scoring opportunities, and things will even out in your
favor.
If you're going to practice anything
on your 5-bar at all, practice the "Brush Pass"-- read FAQ2
and skip straight to the "brush passing" section. The brush
pass techniques will begin bearing improvements to your game
almost immediately. So the brush-pass is _as_ important as
learning a good 3-rod shot. Spend as much time practicing
this as your you do your shot.
What else do you need to know about your
5-rod? You should be able to: 1) block opposing defensive
shots; 2) block opposing 5-rod passes. The first point is
difficult for many people because there are "too many men"
on the rod, and the range of motion of that rod is very limited.
The following exercise (also described in FAQ3) is very helpful:
Lift up the opposing 5-rod. Pass the ball back and forth between
your 5-rod and your 3-rod, doing ALL ANGLE PASSES. The straight
passes are easy to intercept, but the angle passes are the
ones which teach the range of motion for each man on the 5-rod;
it may be frustrating but even a few 10-15 minute sessions
will help vastly. Once your "intuition" for the 5-rod is improved,
you will block more shots from the opposing defensive region.
Also, by using this intuition, you can begin using your 3-rod
men to block the "holes" in your five-bar (usually the spaces
between the 2nd & 3rd and 3rd & 4th men). "Meshed" in this
way, both your 3-rod and 5-rod can contribute in the most
effective way.
The second point, blocking passes, will
be improved just by the intuitions developed while learning
the brush pass; also you can block slow-medium speed passes
by moving your 5-rod back and forth rapidly, so that you "swat"
away any passes. Moving unpredictably back and forth can also
make it more difficult for a good passer to choose the open
pass. Remember that your wall pass is very open because the
bumper on the five-bar prevents your men from actually touching
the wall; against very good brush-passers, you can "twitch",
pretending to move the five-bar off of the wall (or lane),
but actually keeping it stationary-- mix your "twitches" and
back-and-forth movements. This advice even should be applied
to on a standard moving-defense in the defensive-region!
Finally, if you have practice your brush-pass,
a consequence will be that you will habitually keep your 3-rod
angled forward, making it much easier to catch loose balls.
If the defense is shooting, you can angle it backwards to
try to catch a blocked shot. When your 5 and 3 rod are both
lifted for any reason, they should swing to the horizontal,
the 5 rod clockwise, the 3 rod counter-clockwise. In this
way, your 3-rod is ready to catch an incoming loose ball,
and the 5-rod is ready to block a bounce off of the opposing
5-rod.
Strategy:
After you learn your chosen shot and
the brush pass, you must do two things with these: learn to
execute these consistently (19 out of 20 times) and religiously
use them in real play.
In addition to your shot, pass, and shot-pass
strategy, there are additional points 1) _never ever_ accidentally
lose a ball you have possession of-- practicing pinning hard
any ball which is about to get away from you; 2) learn to
_always_ foos the ball to yourself-- practice this; 3) _never_
repeat bad strategies; 4) _never_ shoot the ball from the
5-rod; 5) learn ball control & pass-catching, and when you
lift your 3-rod up swing it up counter-clockwise/toes-forward--
this is so you will learn to catch loose balls like velcro.
In More Detail:
Your shot options (long, middle, straight)
should be practiced to at least 9 out of 10 consistency, and
preferably 19 out of 20. The same goes for each of your brush
pass options (wall-pass/brush-down, lane-pass/brush-up). Once
you're this consistent, don't even dream of using a less effective
trick shot or second shot in a tournament. The same goes for
hacking from the 5-bar-- sure, you may sometimes score, but
since your pass and shot are so consistent, your scoring percentage
_per 5-bar possession_ will be higher if you brush pass and
shoot from your 3-bar instead! Maximize your percentages!
Ditto goes for losing the ball; a lost ball on a 5-rod possession
may mean one less point for you; losing the ball from the
defensive region may give your opponent a 3-rod shot opportunity,
which is _bad_ if his shot is as good as yours! If you can't
serve the ball to yourself, that's as bad as losing a 5-rod
possession!
Learn to keep your 3-rod either swung
up counter-clockwise and horizontally with toes-forward, or
down with the toes still slightly angled forward. In either
case you are ready or almost-ready to catch a loose ball or
quick pass. On a Tornado, this forward-angle can also "auto-stuff"
defensive shots when the ball bounces hard off of the 3-man's
toe. The uncommon exception to the rule is when your opponent's
defensive shots are weak, you can consider angling your 3-man
backwards (in this case only) to try to "catch" the shot by
blocking it.
But when you lift your 5-rod, lift it
by turning the rod _clockwise_ . And when it is down defending
against a 2-rod shot, angle it toes-slightly-forward so that
any hard shots will bounce hard off the toe, and perhaps into
the opposing goal (i.e. "auto-stuff") or at least to you 3-rod
which is waiting angled-forward (if you read the last paragraph)
and automatically ready to catch any such rebound; hence when
you lift both rods, the two lines will "swing away" from each
other, 3-rod counter clockwise, 5-rod clockwise.
Never shooting from the 5-rod was explained
above. Also, a blocked 5-rod shot may mean a 5-rod possession
and therefore a point for your opponent! Of course, there
are some exceptions to the rule. These exceptions will be
discussed next, but remembers they are only exceptions to
fine-tune your strategy, not excuses to have lapses in your
strategy.
The most difficult point is the one about
not repeating bad strategies. For example, let's pretend your
chosen (and best) shot on offense is the pull. If your opponent
blocks your first attempt, you should probably stick with
the same shot. However, if many more pulls are blocked, you
may consider going to your second-shot, or even a trick shot;
in this case, although your pull is your best shot, it is
not the best shot to use _against this opponent_. You may
find the snake works better; you should experiment and find
what your best shot is, and stick with that. An unexpected
one-time trick shot may also be worth one point here, but
no more than that.
The same goes for a 5-rod shot, or a
shot or pass immediately upon foosing the ball. If it's unexpected,
and you think your chances are high for scoring, it may be
justified. Try it once. Remember it's all percentages: repeatedly
using these tricks or hacks will only make you score less.
The same goes for defense. Suppose you
use a stationary race-defense and it usually works, but if
one day you should run up against someone who always scores
on you, you should drop the race defense, and experiment with
a moving-defense; although if you're not familiar with a moving-defense,
you may still block 50% or 25% of the shots, while previously
you were blocking about 0% with the race-defense. Now, instead
of a hopeless race, the burden is now on the shooter who has
to guess which holes you are opening, and when.
Remember, you can also vary the _type_
of moving defense that you use; if the opponent is always
scoring on your moving defense when you use your far 2-man,
switch to your 1-man periodically-- if the opponent scores
too often when you bait the long shot, bait the middle or
straight. So switching the 2-man that you use is good, just
as long as you don't do it too often-- if the shooter can
count on you switching, he can wait for the switch then shoot
it in. Also, to increase the unpredictability of your defensive
motions, remember to experiment with your mix of several techiniques:
1) a periodically standstill rod, 2) a moving rod, (push/pull
movement), 3) back-forth circular movements of the men, 4)
"twitching" movements to give the appearance that your men
are going to move to another spot in the defense, but actually
stay put; 5) switching your 2-man; 6) leaving the straight-shot
open.
In summary, when you are using a moving-defense,
_think_ about what areas you are blocking-- don't get caught
just moving your men back and forth across the front of the
goal without being aware of which holes are being opened most,
and which hole is likely to look most enticing to the shooter.
A moving-defense is _not_ strictly a random defense; there
is a lot of subtle "baiting" to be done along with the unpredictability.
Be able to adjust your defense for different opponents as
soon as possible.
You get the idea: figure out what works,
then stick to it. This means using your brush-pass and "best"-shot
sequence. Keep the exceptions infrequent, and make the exceptions
work toward your scoring and blocking percentages.
Summary: use the tools you have practiced
to your advantage!
Chapter 3
So You Thought You Were Good ...
But Then You Went to the First Big Tournament
This chapter will be short, but will
also be on the topic most dear to my heart. The chapter title
describes me a few years ago, and the only difference today
is that I'm still not good, but now I know it...
My only advice is that if you're beating
all the players around you, you _have_ to go out and find
players who can beat _you_. Then you'll see what great foosball
is like, and then you may be motivated to practice that brush-pass,
that moving-defense, and all those other techniques that seemed
like sheer nonsense to you before.
Probably the easiest way to find good
players in your area is to find local Tornado tournaments.
Call the Tornado Promotions Hot Line at (817) 561-0511, and
they will be able to tell you the phone number of a "promotor"
(i.e. tournament-organizer) in your area. Then call your promotor,
who will give you all of the details. The Striker foosball
tables are starting to make inroads in the foos-world, so
you can also contact them at Dynamo at (800) 527-6054. Also,
you can find many tournament listings in alt.sport.foosball's
FAQ 3: "Playing Locations." And of course you can pipe up
on alt.sport.foosball to see if any other players are in your
area. Finally, if you're suspicious about these Tornado or
Stryker tables you've heard of, give them a good try anyways:
go to these tournaments for a few months, then decide what
you think... I can almost guarantee you will eventually be
a "convert"!
The other advantage to playing better
players is that you learn faster... _much_ faster. You'll
learn what a good moving-defense for a pull shot or a snake
is like; the subtleties are hard to figure out on your own!
You'll learn new options from regular shot set-ups that you
never knew existed. You'll learn the importance of ball spin,
and how quickly you will lose if you don't have a brush pass
or stick pass series. You may even learn downright useless
things such as how to set up and shoot the flamboyant Rainbow
(aerial shot), or the Alien. You get the idea.
So, whether you're the current college
champ, bar champ, or a former addict, go ahead and find those
better players ... although you may lose more games than you're
accustomed to, you will probably have a new drive to become
better at the sport. And once you attend a Tour event, you'll
be hopelessly hooked, and the entire sport will benefit from
the widened base of competition players.
As a final word, please read Chapter
2 of this file. It contains some general advice which is valid
and useful no matter how good you are at the sport. The sequence
of choosing one shot, then learning and always using the brush-pass
are key, as is the advice on strategy; even following these
instructions will immediately improve your game (i.e. stop
hacking from 5-rod and pass, and concentrate on one shot).
The one thing I would add is to learn a good moving defense,
since you _will_ find that most players have 3-rod shots which
can't be reliably raced -- even if your moving defense is
still letting shots through, you'll find that the shots-against
percentage has at least decreased compared to your stationary
race-defense; unfortunately there is not a faq (frequently-asked-questions)
file on this topic yet, but it should be forthcoming. There
are however, faq files on the brush-pass (faq2) and the snake
(aka rollover) and pull shots (faq6) that are worth reading.
Happy foosing!
(C) Copyright 1995 Robert Uyeyama.
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