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Advice To Bring on Junior Player

Cheers for clearing that up Robbo:)
Now back to Bob:cool:
Good luck in whatever you do mate, like I said I will help in anyway I can, (with your EGO mainly but also anything else kit wise) If I have it you are welcome to borrow it.
Get around and try different training ideas, dont eat your dads dohnuts and remember school as well. If you have sights set on a job in paintball in future years, you wont with no qualifications.:)
See you soon buddy
Nige
 

Skeet

Platinum Member
While we are on the GCSE subject...they are very important...even if you dont want to do A Levels etc (you can do them at college if you get kicked out of 6th form!)...I recently saw an dvert for someone wanted in a Tesco store, purely to sweep up...that all...minimum 5 A-C GCSE's required. Why? To cut down on the number of applicants...
 

johnmassive

Spitfire Factory
Sep 5, 2004
525
8
43
Ion Noob
Something I always tell new players is to spend their money on paintballs and ignore most of the crap on sale in the classifieds.
 

Lovetone

Peter Pan of Paintball
Feb 25, 2005
4,208
47
73
Manchestoh
www.myspace.com
While we are on the GCSE subject...they are very important...even if you dont want to do A Levels etc (you can do them at college if you get kicked out of 6th form!)...I recently saw an dvert for someone wanted in a Tesco store, purely to sweep up...that all...minimum 5 A-C GCSE's required. Why? To cut down on the number of applicants...
also to maybe try and get someone who can show some commitment in acheivement. id take someone with 5 a-c GCSEs over someone without it.
shows they at least made some effort at school.
 

NSKlad

Pistolas y Corazones
Dec 9, 2006
949
36
63
32
Bournemouth
im fourteen now and my dad was never well enough to take me out and do stuff with me, and he didn't have a clue what paintball is. so i wasn't aware of paintball either until i was twelve.

i think its great how you are trying to support your son this way, and i wish you both luck in paintball and life. just tell your lad not to whip me too bad if im ever playin him! :D ;)

i wish i had this kind of backup from my mum/dad a few years ago..... *sniff sniff*..... im off for a cry now...... :(
 

YourMUM

1 4 all and all 4 1
Feb 25, 2005
315
0
0
devon
gilboys.co.uk
one was a fat guy with a big mouth and no brain and I can't honestly remember the other one.
!




I so want to fill in here BUT no.




To every 1 on this THANK YOU.

We start this training this Sunday and fitness too so I might not be that fat, I can still make there 40 off the brake.

It’s been so good to hear +++++++ all the way on this.


Ill keep you up to date ok so watch this space
 

Dave S ECI

ECI + HFT
Jul 17, 2001
1,040
148
88
53rd and 3rd
Visit site
I would like to know who is who in paintball
The Best Way forward with him
Timing as he is So young and don’t want to burn him out
Mistakes that have Been made

I’m going to invest a ton of £££ into him but need Help.
Here is my 2p:

Firstly, what does your son want? Its great that you are prepared to back him but he will need to provide the drive and motivation to further himself. No amount of pushing will get the same results as a committed individual. The difference between commitment and compliance is miles wide.

Secondly, make sure that your son uses his mind. He will need to be able to think for himself and you can help him develop this. Suggest he reads widely, it will keep his mind working and mature him beyond his years.

A thorough and well-thought approach is central to developing him. Sergei of the Russian Legion doesn't rely on prevailing way of thinking in paintball to guide his actions. Instead he uses his own intelligence and methodical approach to think through any issue he faces.

In terms of the whos who in paintball? For the reasons mentioned above this doesn't really matter. If I had to name names, then:

Mark Toye - Wise guy, would be worth picking his brains.
Mark "Chuck" Berry - Knows his stuff.
Twizz - Knows his stuff.
Dave Stewart - Knows his stuff, can provide lots of insight into every aspect of training also.

I respect each of the guys mentioned above and even talking to them for an hour each would be time well spent.

The best way forward is to invest in your sons technical abilities. The key part here is getting him into the right habits and doing decent drillwork off his own back. Getting him to understand what he is doing and why is key so that he can continue developing himself. Consider paying someone to coach him one on one for a day (4 names above).

Training (and by this I mean repetitive drillwork) is physically, emotionally and mentally tiring. Sticking at it separates the winners and losers however.

Timing wise, I suggest you get him to do regular fitness training and some more specific paintball fitness training (Dave Stewart runs a very good circuit training exercise for his team). Get him to think for himself in as many ways as possible and treat him as an adult. This will give you the building blocks for later success. How you mix paintball drillwork etc. into this is up to you.

Mistakes would include glibly listening to anyone. Craft your own future and question everything. If you are going to fold something into your sons training, make sure he understands why.

Lastly, getting the approach right is difficult but will ultimately develop your son far more than throwing ££s around ever could. I say to my team that if the only issues we face are financial, I will be happy. Money is easily quantifiable and therefore understandable. Heart, dedication and commitment are intangible and so much harder to grasp.

If I can be of any assistance, feel free to PM me.