The idea is not to block every shot. The idea is to make your opponent believe that you might block every shot.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When you play guard, you're not going to block a lot of shots. Inside, you're going to block shots.
Even when my opponent hits a very good shot, I don't just want to get it back. I want to get it back so they have difficulty. And then I can control the point.
Normally, however, I try to avoid repetitions of any shot.
I mean, one shot you treat like you have forty little matches instead of one forty shot match. It makes all the difference in the world. It's easier to just forget about a not so good shot.
I'm trying to be a complete player and have every shot in the game.
You try to figure out the best way to throw the shot put, or the perfect way to long jump, and you don't ever get it. You just chip away, chip away, chip away as time goes on.
For the most part, when you play a full shot from the primary rough at your course, you're gauging how close to a standard shot you can hit based on your lie in the grass.
You don't have to hit perfect shots all the time here. The variety of shots you get to play, the shots you sometimes have to hit along the ground, it's just a lot of fun to me.
If anybody's getting a shot, somebody's getting a shot against me because I'm the guy to beat.
There's only a couple stats that matter. No one cares how many blocked shots a guy has, how many hits.