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Borrowing a term from sports psychologist Joan Vickers, Robison called this specific quality of gaze “quiet eye.” He said it is more than a lack of motion. Like Bradley’s gaze that so ...
He had, in her estimation, violated a core principle of the “Quiet Eye,” a phenomenon she had discovered and named decades earlier. “When you make that eye movement, your club can come up ...
I can still hear the chalky, Chicago-dialect baritone of my late varsity baseball Coach T, telling me “C’mon, Mar-zee, Eyes On! Eyes On!” when I was at-bat during a game.
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