As a coach at the NFAA Easton Yankton Archery Center, I see the same form errors repeat across skill levels and bow styles. The good news: most are predictable and fixable once you diagnose them correctly from your groupings.
Reading Your Groupings First
Tight groups off-center = a tuning or sight problem. Wide scattered groups = form inconsistency. Diagnose before fixing.
1. Bow Arm Collapse
Symptom: Arrows flying low, worse under pressure.
Fix: Hold your bow arm pointed at the target for 2 full seconds after release. Train this habit until follow-through is automatic.
2. Chicken Wing (Drawing Elbow Too Low)
Symptom: Inconsistent groupings, string slap, back fatigue.
Fix: Film yourself from behind. Drive the drawing elbow backward — not sideways. It should be level with or above the arrow at full draw.
3. Plucking the String
Symptom: Consistent right-miss for right-handed archers.
Fix: Blank bale practice with eyes closed. Your drawing hand should end up near your neck after release — not out to the side.
4. Gripping the Bow Too Hard
Symptom: Arrows hitting left consistently (right-handed archer).
Fix: Use a bow sling and open your hand fully. Only the base of your thumb pad should contact the grip.
5. Target Panic
Symptom: Releasing involuntarily, flinching, inability to hold aim.
Fix: Systematic blank bale desensitization over several weeks. Never rush the process — unresolved target panic always returns under pressure.
Get Form Analysis from a Champion
Book a session with Lalit Jain for in-person diagnosis and correction of your form challenges.