Not at all, really. I only started thinking about it last night when it came up on in-depth. I don't know where to even begin with structured practice, much less the other aspects.
What kind practice for how long for mechanics development, etc. escapes me 
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En réponse à @Shyrshadi
. Ok so was talking about the book "range" and its comparison of kind and unkind games - it specifically references golf as kind because it's more perfection and less variable based. Tiger Woods was raised as a kid to be the perfect golf pro perfecting every stroke whilst
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En réponse à @x5_PiG @Shyrshadi
Roger federer grew up playing all kinds of sports and settled on a tennis focus much later as a teenager. The more unkind (fluid and reactive) game of tennis seemed to fit rogers diverse skills and varied learning. Sc2 is the most unkind game
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En réponse à @x5_PiG @Shyrshadi
Where EVERYTHING must change based on your opponent, meta, matchup and strategy. It is not based on perfection but more on an extremely diverse set of skills that can be swapped between at will. As such focused practice shouldn't be praticing your golf swing over and over again
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En réponse à @x5_PiG @Shyrshadi
It should have far more diverse stuff and range of practice for maximum gain. As a pro the best practice is an opponent doing the same build 20 times vs you so you can perfect your reaction but also so you can experience and understand all the weird paths the game can go down
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En réponse à @x5_PiG @Shyrshadi
Final thought: you look for systems and repetition to create consistent practice and order in the chaos. You hunt for set plays and reactions and automation - but it all floats within the most ultimately flexible game where mental flexibility and adaptation is always number 1
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En réponse à @x5_PiG @Shyrshadi
The modern training approach for comparable sports (e.g., basketball) emphasizes on automation of mechanical skills that doesn't require deliberate "attention". This is based on the long standing finding that human has limited cognitive capacity. 1/
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When players practice dribbling, they are required to do other activities at the same time that require attention to situation and decision making (e.g., press the button that light up - there are multiple buttons). 2/
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This makes dribbling a low attention activity in game, so players can pay attention to other stuff on the court. This can be thought of as not missing worker and supply building production when you are dealing with specific harassment that requires adaptive actions. 3/
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So a "diverse vs. specific" perspective may not be the best way to think about SC2 practice as of current knowledge. 4/
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It's a massive over-simplification: but key in highlighting that those drillable qualities are only a small part of the whole. I think we could develop awesome drills for perfecting mechanics - focusing on macroing well in the midst of defending 3 pronged harassment etc.
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Drilling that sort of exercise would be great and definitely should be added to pro training regimens of possible. But most improvements would be made in a more complex sort of training, that with a larger focus on deep understanding that comes with wide range of experience
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Sounds like just about all the sports. Having drills is important and shortens the time required to achieve certain goals.
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