If you've been using ArcheryBuddy to analyze your form, you might be wondering how to push your form score from the 7.0 range into the coveted 9.0+ territory. The good news? It's absolutely achievable with deliberate, focused practice.
In this guide, we'll share 8 proven drills that elite archers use to refine their technique. These aren't just random exercisesβthey target the specific form elements that ArcheryBuddy evaluates, helping you make measurable improvements.
Understanding Your Form Score
Before diving into the drills, let's understand what goes into your form score. ArcheryBuddy's AI analyzes multiple aspects of your shot:
- Stance & alignment β feet, hips, and shoulder positioning
- Bow arm β extension, elbow rotation, and stability
- Draw hand β anchor point consistency and finger position
- Back tension β proper muscle engagement
- Head position β upright and stable throughout the shot
A score of 7.0 means you're getting the basics right, but there's room for refinement. A 9.0+ indicates near-perfect execution. Let's get you there!
1. Blank Bale Shooting
When you're focused on hitting the target, you stop paying attention to your form. This is the biggest barrier to improvement for most intermediate archers.
Use blank bale shooting - the #1 drill recommended by Olympic coaches:
- Stand 3-5 meters from a blank target butt (no target face)
- Close your eyes or look at a neutral point on the bale
- Execute your shot sequence with full attention on body feel
- Focus on back tension and a clean release
- Shoot 20-30 arrows per session

Record these sessions with ArcheryBuddy! Even without a target, you can analyze your form and track improvements in your body mechanics.
2. SPT (Specific Physical Training)
Many archers struggle to hold steady at full draw because they haven't built the specific muscle endurance needed for consistent shots.
Practice drawing without releasing to build endurance:
- Draw to your anchor point as normal
- Hold at full draw for 10-30 seconds
- Focus on maintaining perfect alignment and back tension
- Let down slowly (don't release)
- Rest 30 seconds between reps
- Do 10-15 reps per session
Start with 10-second holds and gradually increase. If your form breaks down during the hold, the duration is too long.
3. Mirror Training
You can't fix what you can't see. Most archers have no idea what their form actually looks like during a shot.
Use a full-length mirror for immediate visual feedback:
- Set up a mirror to your side
- Use a stretch band or unstrung bow (NOT a loaded bow indoors)
- Practice your draw and hold while watching your reflection
- Check for: straight bow arm, elbow rotation, head position, T-form alignment
- Make micro-adjustments and repeat

4. Resistance Band Training
You can't always get to the range. Without regular practice, muscle memory fades and form consistency drops.
Use a stretch band to practice anywhere:
- Use a band with similar resistance to your bow
- Practice full draw sequences: stance β draw β anchor β hold β release
- Focus on engaging back muscles, not biceps
- Do 50-100 reps daily

Olympic archers often do 100+ band draws daily. The repetition builds muscle memory that transfers directly to the range.
5. Anchor Point Consistency Drill
An inconsistent anchor is one of the biggest accuracy killers. Every millimeter of variation translates to inches on the target.
Practice precise anchor placement:
- Draw to anchor with eyes closed
- Have a friend check if string touches your nose and mouth corner
- Use a small piece of tape on your face as a reference point
- Practice coming to anchor 20+ times, checking each time
- Goal: hit the exact same spot every single time

6. Closed-Eye Shooting
Target panic causes archers to release the moment they see the target. This ruins the smooth, controlled shot execution you need.
Build trust in your form by removing visual dependency:
- At close range (3-5m) with a safe backstop
- Aim at the target, then close your eyes
- Execute your shot completely by feel
- Open eyes only after the arrow hits
- β οΈ This is advancedβensure safety first!
7. Slow Motion Draws
Speed hides mistakes. When you draw quickly, you can't feel the subtle errors that are hurting your accuracy.
Slow everything down to feel every detail:
- Take 10-15 seconds to complete your draw (normally 2-3 seconds)
- Pay attention to: grip pressure, string path, shoulder movement
- Note any points where you feel tension or compensation
- Address those specific issues in your training
Record your slow-motion draws with ArcheryBuddy in slow-mo video mode. You'll spot things you never noticed at full speed.
8. Regular Video Analysis
Without objective feedback, you're practicing blind. You might be reinforcing bad habits without even knowing it.
Use consistent self-analysis with ArcheryBuddy:
- Record 10-20 shots at the start and end of each practice
- Review your form score trends over time
- Focus on one improvement area per session
- Compare your form to your best shots
- Track your score progression: 7.0 β 7.5 β 8.0 β 8.5 β 9.0+
π Your 9.0+ Action Plan
- Blank bale β 20-30 arrows, 2-3x per week
- SPT holds β 10-15 reps daily
- Mirror training β 10 min before each session
- Resistance band β 50-100 reps daily
- Anchor checks β Until it's automatic
- Video analysis β Every practice session with ArcheryBuddy
- Be patientβform improvement takes 4-6 weeks to solidify
Remember, a 9.0+ form score isn't about perfectionβit's about consistency. The archers who score highest are the ones who do the same thing, the same way, every single time. These drills will help you build that consistency.
Ready to Track Your Form Progress?
ArcheryBuddy uses AI to analyze your shooting form and give you instant feedback on exactly what to improve. Download free and start shooting better today!



