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Sounds like all you need to do is keep working at them. Use them in drills and technique practice too, they'll come along much faster than only using them in sparring.
Maybe I'm alone in this, but I find that my repertorire of moves in a full speed sparring match or a fight is much reduced from my theoretical repertorie available when training or doing drill.
In my post above I was speaking of using meisterhau in the 'perfect' way, for the one-strike kill. I suppose this ability will fade as my opponents learn increasingly sophisticated counters and better winding and binding techniques, and the whole thing ultimately becomes a kind of arms race.
I have the same problem. What I have found that does work is
All good advice Jaron. Still, I dont see this as a 'problem', I think it is just a natural consequence of fighting. I dont know if the Masters could bring every bit of their training into a fight, but I certainly have never met anyone who could.
I think it's normal for there to be a certain lag between the two, assuming you are always learning.
There are three factors at play, one when the adrenaline is flowing, I simply dont believe you can think as calmly and clearly as when you are relaxed. It's like you have less RAM to work with. Two, it's simply easier to execute a move in drill when the results are predictable, so moves you dont have 'down' perfectly can still be done very nicely, but they just may not be there yet when you start swinging full contact, full speed. Three, (re: what I was saying earlier), sometimes you think you learned something very well in drill or in half-seed sparring, but you may find out it 'feels' very different at full speed, against an aggressive, unpredictable and fast opponent.
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