Pat,
I totally agree and totally disagree...yes, the mental side of the sport is the difference, all things being equal, between winning and losing. Mental toughness, playing under pressure mixed with a intellect for the game (strategy, decision making, and adjustments) is crucial and in that I agree...I agree that the US excels in this. But...this is part of our "approach", it is part of what we have learned is needed to get the most out of our games.
However, a key phrase above was "all things being equal" - in the US, the pull and rollover make up 95% of all shots and there is no other shot that has been in the top mix for nearly 20 years. The last other shot was Jeep's push kick. In the early days it was 70% pulls and a few push kicks and a pull kick or two but thats it.
the reason these shots were selected was because of our committment to using what gives us the best chance of winning. No top player like Todd, Gummy, Tom, Adrian, Spree, Billy, Terry, Ryan, Rob, etc shoot a push shot...none of them shoot a Euro pin. All of them CAN shoot the push and every other shot and this isn't saying they don't yank something out of their bag of tricks once in a while (some more than others) but 99% of their careers in top level competition, they shoot a rollover or a pull every time. As a matter of fact, I don't think there is an alternate shot in the top 100 players unless Chris Dube is still in the top 100. Even if he is, that is literally 99% of the US top 100 players shoot a pull or rollover.
people mimic the top professionals in every sport, always have, always will...they mimic them because they are committed to winning and they make good decisions about what approaches, strategies, and yes "shots" should be used...Europe is converting in ALL ways