Originally posted by two4hooking:
Originally posted by Lambow:
Hill also tought them to shoot with a dead release, while he himself, shot with a more fluid pull-through release.
Whoa....So Schulz and Hill had different releases? I beg to differ. John explains that your release "deviates" on moving objects and you can clearly see this in the first shot of his film.
In this film you can certainly see Hill with a pretty relaxed hand sticking in the face in the first slo-mo.
Other shots show his hand coming back markedly.
I think they were both on the same page and could vary their release as needed....and I think that for instructional purposes John taught the stcik to your face follow through to help promote initial good form. [/b]
I have an old VHS tape around here somewhere, that features one of Hill's shorts, that's called "Archery"
In one part, he's teaching several young women how to shoot. In that, he's advocating the dead release to them, and that's the way they were shooting.
Schulz, tought that it was permissible for the string hand to recoil back behind the face, when shooting at moving targets... all the stationary targets I've seen him shoot, were with a dead release.
One of the things Hill told the Schulz boy's was "upon release both hands do nothing"
I looked at the film... in the first segment of the slo-mo shot, the camera switched away from Hill to the arrow, at the split second the arrow left the bow.... couldn't tell what the release hand did on that shot, but the other scenes you could. They were a dynamic release, on a stationary target.