Well, I did try to incorporate the dead release, too, rather than the dynamic one, when I started working on the stuff in his vids. Don't get me wrong, his info did change my approach to shooting and got me back into a more orthodox approach with a recurve; I had been basically trying to break free from the chains, so to speak, and using the Asbell method of canting, etc. Since I was a trained wheelie target shooter, that's the world I wanted to get far away from, for sanity reasons. Anyway, any sense of freedom I had pretty quickly turned sour when I couldn't shoot well consistently. Rick's vids made me realize that good form is good form, whatever bow one chooses to shoot. They got me to establish a solid anchor with multiple references, although still using split finger, and holding longer, and shooting with the bow upright, not canted. I could never get the dead release down, though. Sometimes I'd relax and make great shots, but just as often I'd creep and shoot left, or collapse and shoot right. The dynamic release style just works better for me, as that is the way I was trained to shoot with training wheels on the bow. Hand goes straight back, bow goes straight forward, arrows go center. I think everyone has to find his own way, eventually, but Rick's vids helped put me on the path, so to speak.