- To me, when you're crossed up, it's your job to keep your partner from getting bunkered. Out of necessity, some of the other team will get VERY close to both of you, and this will make you antsy, but you have to hold tight, tell your partner what's happening, and stay on the trigger when you need to. I occasionally peek down my tape but I never fire more than two shots down the tape 'cause I've had my partner bunkered because I wasn't looking. Mainly, I peek down the tape to catch someone my partner couldn't see, or to make them tuck in and take the pressure off my partner.
-Also, when you're crossed up and your partner is still in, if someone comes to bunker me on my tape side, and my partner's side is still hot, I don't spin to shoot the guy, and I don't try to pick him off. I just keep shooting in front of my partner and trust him to shoot out the guy before the guy gets to me. Then, if the ref trys to pull me for shooting while dead, I just point out the fact that I never shot at my bunkerer yet he had paint on him before he got to me. There was never a trade after he shot me. Therefore I was still alive, and was allowed to shoot. How did I know he had paint on him? I trusted my partner that he would mark the guy before he got to me. Some people call that playing "gray". I call it trusting your partner. If you're wrong, you get a 1-for-1.
- As a side note: I've known some people that will shoot their own partner if he doesn't stay crossed up. They'd rather play by theirselves rather than worry about someone that they can't trust.
Basically, in drills, I've seen three backmen regularly decimate (AKA Kill) six frontmen 'cause they stay basically crossed up (the center guy gets to shoot whomever he wants) and they communicate.
Practice, practice, practice by yourselves, somewhere you can work on stuff without interference. Don't scrimmage until the end of the day.
Ray "Eye even cross my I's
" N.