Hey guys.
I'm starting to analyze some footage I manage to get recorded at my local weeklies. I'm getting close to where I want to be when it comes to my movement. Though I can practice fancy movements till the cows come home, that wont do much good when my decision making and punish game leave much to be desired, wich is generally where I drop the ball the most.
So I had a weekly where I could hog the recording setup for a couple of matches. First set is me getting my ass handed to me by Avalancer (now going by the tag Nebbii). Also happens to be my favorite Yoshi player and probably favorite dutch player in general. Still have a long way to go, to get head to head with him. But in the first set already, I noticed I missed a lot of opportunities, with a couple of speciffic situations I could use some advice with.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OwMfiZnL1PU
1
So first off at 31:07, the first hit I land on him is an upthrow after wich I follow him to the top platform with a fullhop B-air. I did manage to get some lucky hits in after that, but if he was on point there I'd deffinetly wouldn't have gotten away with that (I think he could've easily shielded then punish me with a shielddrop into an u-air). That rising B-air was obviously pretty useless. So the question here is, what would be the correct follow-up in this situation, after the throw? Should I just have possitioned that B-air better by dashing forward a bit beforehand? Or wasn't there even a reliable follow-up situation to begin with? In wich case I wonder if it would've been better to stay bellow him and try to keep center stage there.
2
A different situation, where I deffinetly could've made more out of, is at 31:25. Where Nebbii input his F-air a bit late. I manage to land a shine there, probably not the best option, but with his DI goin outward, it gave me an edgeguard opportunity.
Now this is a mistake I often seem to make where I automatically go for one of my favorite of-stage edgeguards, where I try to get bellow my opponent a bit, wait in my shine, then rise up with a b-air to prevent my opponent from getting back. One obvious fault there is my positioning. I shined too early, leaving me right above him. Then when I jump back with the b-air, he follows me, hits an u-air, then turns the tables and takes my stock.
Main question here being: was the option to go off-stage with a shine-turnaround-Bair viable to begin with? Would it have worked with propper execution, if I hadn't SH-hopped off but just ran off, so I would've been bellow or right next to him? I think in this matchup specifically, it only would've worked if I'd hit both the shine and b-air, or he'd flutter through it anyway.
But probably a better question to ask here: is what would've been a more safe and reliable edgeguard option to choose from right there after I hit that shine?
3
Last situation I'd like to dig into for now is at 32:47. Where I land a shine and immediatly fullhop after him, I deffinetly could've hit a D-air right after, but I thought I needed to correct my positioning, so I doublejumped then D-aired too late and missed, returning to neutral game.
So how would I get the most out of this situation? Would trying to pillar him there give me the best opportunity to continue combo-ing him. Or could I get a better combo off of that shine if i'd went for the platform and just uptilt there for example?
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Those are some questions right off the bat, when it comes to analysing my own games. Still rather new for me when it comes to that, so other tips for analysing and theorycrafting would also be greatly appreciated. Like how to spot patterns when it comes to making similar mistakes and how to go about ironing them out. And stuff like, what would be good questions to ask myself when looking back recorded matches.
Cheers!
Guido.