From books I've read, I understand that it was a common practice in the old days (maybe still is) for a traditional shooter in tournaments to shoot instinctively at close distances and gap shoot at longer distances. You could apparently tell by looking at them, because when they shot instinctively, they canted the bow, and when the shot gap, they held the bow vertically. I tried that myself, and found that I was able to finally get to the point that I was a mediocre shot both ways. If I was going to be a good shot both ways, I would have to shoot a lot more arrows than I have time for, particularly at longer distances as I can't do that at home. So I decided the heck with that, I would just practice instinctively, since that's the way I hunt. Sometimes if I decide to shoot at something 80-100 yards away, I'll still shoot gap, which at least usually gets me in the target so I don't lose as many arrows.