Everywhere you look the advice is the same: play with and
against the best players you can find to improve quickly. In Canada, team play
is not divided by pennants or skill divisions as in Australia. When you play in
a tournament you play against the top people, over and over and so you lose
over and over. The more you practice the
more pressure you apply to yourself. And of course you expect some improved
performance to match the extent of the practice time committed. The more
failure, the more practice, the more heightened the expectations, the more
serious the disappointment.
After four years I have to admit this doesn’t work for me. I have started to play club events almost
exclusively. I was appreciated. I got good results playing club bowlers. I
relaxed. My draw accuracy and consistency improved in absolute terms.
So, my conclusion is this: if you are not competing in a ‘streamed’ environment where you play against opponents close to your own skill level and where you can advance gradually as you succeed, you should not compete where you will be always defeated . This is not the professional wisdom but it is what I personally find.
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