How to analyse a badminton match
What would you analyse from a match
I had a discussion with some coaches
Knowing how to analyse a badminton match is very important if you are to improve your game. After chatting about the different digital systems you could use to analyse a match, I had these thoughts.
What do you think about these ideas and would you add any 🙂
- Having the information is valuable but knowing what to do with it is essential – maybe obvious!
- Just knowing the numbers of Winner/Errors is not going to help, it’s interesting but is it really useable in that simple format?
- What are the questions coaches should ask of analysis? – how many do you have
- Which match data points provide effective information when designing practice interventions or progressions?
- Coaches need to be careful of asking questions just for the sake of interest without application, questions that sound valuable but maybe don’t produce usable insights.
- The process of designing practices that use match data may be much tougher than we realise
- How often is match analyse used to confirm practice improvements – or is the bias often towards negative findings?
- Is analysis often slanted towards negative aspects rather than positive outcome?
- Knowing what your opponents are doing is as important as looking at yourself (your players) – do you have this balance right?
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As always, I’m very grateful if you have read this far 🙂
I’d love to hear your views about which badminton backhand defensive footwork you coach. What are the positive benefits of each technique?
Why not send me an email contact@badmintonandy.com
This is part of a series of conversation starters.
Although not in detail, the posts are written to get you thinking and talking with others.