Hey PP a lot happened in the last two days, I had two entirely different tourney experiences and a bunch of vods to study so i finally get to ask questions about those instead of other peoples.
On friday I was seeded 6 out of 50 and beat the 11 seeded peach before losing to the 3 seed (who is actually 2nd in skill) in winners quarters in falco dittos which was recorded (this guy also went on to win the tourney). Then in losers I lost to the 1st seeded fox because he lost to a marth that's super good at gimping. So I ended up getting 13th. I really wasn't mad at all which I found was surprising so I think my practice meditating on losing helped with that. If anything I was more inspired to do better at the next one even though I lost to the two best people there. I also went out of the tourney feeling like I didn't play that well against the people that I did play; the further into a set I get the more my thoughts dominate my gameplay and then I end up not letting myself adapt and instead trying to force approaches and playing really scared at the same time.
On saturday I came into the tourney as the 4 seed, with the 1 seed being the falco that beat me yesterday. I beat the 12 seed, and then the 5 seed, and then lost to the 1 seed again 3-1. During my set against the 5 seed (puff) I realized I was getting distracted by my thoughts, even if my thoughts were trying to get me back into the game. They kept coming back trying to analyze every situation and the implications of future stuff. There was also some emotional stuff there as well like "why can't you play better?" and some positive stuff as well. After losing to the first seed in winners I wasn't that mad cause i've never beaten him before, but I wasn't exactly in a great mood either. So in losers I ended up playing against this pikachu. I struggled in the first game, and it happened again where I try to control my gameplay instead of letting it flow. Due to my unfamiliarity with the matchup, after winning game 1 and losing game 2, I just decided to avoid his best approach option and tell myself "Don't get naired". The next game the craziest thing happened. Throughout the entire game I just kept thinking "Don't get naired" and it resulted in me barely getting naired at all the rest of the set, but the game was over before I had even realized it. I had unknowingly given myself a mantra to follow in the form of a simple gameplan. Even during me recovering or edgeguarding all I thought was "don't get naired" and eventually the mantra went away and my brain was clear and I was able to play some of the most fun melee I've played in a super long time despite being kind of tired the whole day.
So with this new strategy I went into the next few matches feeling the same that I normally do, but with slightly less fear of losing and slightly more confidence. I beat the 6 seed falco 3-1, and then the same peach I had beat yesterday in losers finals 3-2 who was seeded 7 this day. Then, after playing super well game 5 against that peach, I went into the next set in GF super confident but even more tired. But this time I didn't let those thoughts get to me because I had a mantra of "Don't get shffled" because I was playing against a Falco. Through a super fast paced but equally grueling set I took down the Falco that I had never beat before in ten games. It came down to the last stock similar percents but that didn't even bother me, I stuck to my "don't get naired" gameplan and took the last stock. The feeling I got after was one of the best feelings I've ever had in my life. It was like I was floating, I felt so fulfilled. I was playing so well and during the entire losers run I saw and felt all of the work I had put in pay off. I'm sure you've had a super similar experience yourself when you win. The best part is I'm even more inspired to work harder.
Also thank you to
Kotastic
for the advice, really helped even with only a few meditation sessions.
Sorry for the wall but it feels important for me to share and if anyone has a few thoughts on those few paragraphs I would appreciate it a lot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IdJeKq-PY8
At 0:00 I get a shine and then whiff an upair. I think my idea was to hold stage by just sh bairing back into center, but the low platform and the fact that I jumped made him catch me. Is this position just bad for Falco if I whiff the upair here? Options that come to mind once I land are wd down, run passed without jumping, full hop again, shooting a sh high laser to hit him coming down (not sure if that's good because idk how I would convert that laser into an advantage because this peach lovesss to d smash).
A similar position happened 0:11 where after I get the bair, I go for a fh fair. But then I try to defend stage with a sh high laser whereas I definitely should have done a bair. So is it better to chase peach in the air and then use your superior ff speed even if you miss to hold stage (if that's even possible?) Or is it better to just hold the stage instead of chasing them immediately to set up better for the next interaction?
At 0:15 is the defensive nair I do good at close range vs peach? I've been trying to stay away from sh high dairs in scuffle situations because it loses to them just shielding or moving back and whiff punishing; two simple really common options. I think my idea was to be spaced in case they do shield, contest them putting out a hitbox (jab or dash attack) and I couldn't dash back laser cause of the side platform.
at 0:20 he floats. This position seems great for peach beacuse they're focing a mixup and if I dash back laser to avoid the mixup situation I corner myself. So is dash back full hop back flip then fall with spaced bair or dj a good option there? Is this a tool I should be using more on fod because this situation comes up more often? The option I picked of dash back laser didn't even seem that safe there because they can just float more and then d smash closer to the edge
In general with a side platform that messes up your lasers I feel like you either have to preemptive full hop bair to catch them coming in or go to the side plat preemptively. Because if they're doing a kind of high float it's hard to directly contest once they're over you or coming closer and on fod if you do only one dash back laser you corner yourself. And against high float it just feels like a gamble with the timing or your sh bair. Like at 0:27 I do an awkward bair that puts me in a not great position, because I can't dash back laser.
Thanks so much again PP, I wouldn't have been able to do it without you. Hope you're doing well.