What Is Dartitis? Understanding and Managing The Yips in Darts
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Let’s get one thing straight: besides using the term dartitis as a way to help you search for this article, I don’t like the word. It doesn’t give a broad enough return on an internet search. At its core, it is the same thing that has affected all types of athletes under different names. It has manifested in baseball pitchers, catchers, and infielders. It has shown itself in many golfers, most notably while putting. Tennis players struggle with their serve. Competitive archers struggle in similars ways to dart players. It has happened to NFL kickers on field goals and NBA players on the free-throw line.
Dart players don’t need to feel the stigma of a term that only addresses darts. Dartitis is a poor portmanteau (darts don’t actually get inflamed). If you are struggling, know someone who is, or are fascinated by this topic, read on…
As I continue to encounter players who seek help solving this unique challenge, I am committed to understanding dartitis for consideration of the community. Who hasn’t seen a player struggle with dartitis and just felt horrible for them? I can feel how awful and embarrassed they feel. Alas, I have never dealt with this myself. While I am not a clinician, I am moved to play my part.
It is not for me to diagnose and peddle a “cure”. I am a player and teacher of the game. My intent is to learn and provide the most comprehensive understanding to date to allow you to better assess yourself. I am driven to learn with you along this rocky road, but make no mistake: my desire to help MUST be outdone by your desire overcome.
My work with players has always lead me to read and learn more. Like with any challenge, understanding the problem is the key to addressing it. Not only do some of us avoid this topic as a source of shame hoping it will just go away, we avoid wanting to understand it altogether.
The greatest challenge for you is recognizing what it is, having the desire to address it, and being willing to ask for and receive help when applicable. While there are a variety of professionals who can aid you on your journey, no one is going to “fix” you. If you aren’t moved to overcome your challenges, it most certainly won’t happen. This is a journey that starts and ends with you.
If you are willing to broaden your range and think outside the box, you are more likely to find resources that provide an edge. The term “the yips” helps you do just that. My aim is to better define the affliction of dartitis so that you may find more resources.
To google the word "dartitis", you will find that it was first used in a dart publication in 1981 and then worked into the Oxford English Dictionary in 2007 by a dart website’s effort. It is defined as "a state of nervousness which prevents a player from releasing the dart at the right moment when throwing."
To stop here would be a disservice.
To google the term “the yips”, the history goes back farther to 1927. Golfer Tommy Armour coined the term after recording 23 strokes on a par 5 on the 17th hole at the Shawnee Open. The definition broadens, and thoughtfully so.
The Mayo Clinic says, “it was once thought that the yips were associated only with performance anxiety. However, it now appears that some people have the yips due to a neurological condition affecting specific muscles (focal dystonia). Focal dystonia is a condition that causes involuntary muscle contractions during a specific task. It is most likely related to overuse of a certain set of muscles, similar to writer’s cramp. Anxiety can worsen the effect.”
Simply by casting a wider net with a different search term, we broaden our return to find more answers. From something that affects a handful of dart players, to two pathologies that affect many more worldwide.
Of psychological origin via:
PERFORMANCE ANXIETY
Of neurological origin via:
FOCAL DYSTONIA
Far too many have stopped after researching “dartitis” and chalked up the issue to “nerves”. The yips is not simply about being nervous. The yips is not the “jitters” one gets starting a match or the “choking” that can happen at the finish line. It can be any and/or every type of performance anxiety that turns into a physically debilitating issue.
While jitters and choking are forms of performance anxiety that are more easily understood, they have an expiration related to time. The yips can take hold and not go away. It can also be an unfortunate rewiring of neural pathways that trigger muscles to contract at inopportune times.
Without being diagnostic, the psychological manifestations of dartitis (i.e., the yips) are driven by performance anxiety. Let’s start by saying that anxiety is a common human emotion. We all have developed different biochemical reactions to the thought of future happenings – that is anxiety in a nutshell.
There is a nature-nurture component that has helped to create our individual coping skills. What triggers anxiety and to what degree is different for all of us. We all know our fears about future events are seldom as bad as the experiences we have the moment those events occur. Anxiety shows itself in numerous ways: Muscular tightness, tremors, heart palpitations, shortness of breath, excessive perspiration, etc.
These symptoms can be triggered in our game by some form of analysis paralysis (overthinking). Our short term memory is responsible for the primal tasks at hand (hitting the double), while our longer term memory is more aware of consequence and the bigger picture (the situation, who is present, what you are playing for, etc).
Performance anxiety is the nervousness from the thought of performing an activity in front of other people or an audience. Most of the triggers deal with an out-of-body over-assessment of self and/or the preoccupation with an assessment by others. These relate to the part of the brain that deals with our analytical, long term memory.
The truth of the matter is: no one cares that much. They don’t care if you win or if you lose, and they won’t remember the outcome as long as you think they will – and neither should you.
It is correlated to why our game invites indulgences. Imbibing has a way of muting all types of overthinking. For a quick layman’s understanding: our adrenaline spikes under stress, some more than others. We combat those spikes with alcohol, a depressant. It allows many of us to leave outside worries (job, family, fears) behind for enough time to access our short term (in-the-moment) memory to accomplish the task at hand regardless of what you or anyone else thinks about it.
Perfection (a 9 dart leg) in this game is seldom and shouldn’t be the goal you work towards in every leg with every throw. Holding yourself to such a standard while thinking that others are watching and expectant of it, analyzing your own form, feeling vulnerable, and (over) thinking the consequence of failure is insurmountable.
After reading such a paragraph, is it any wonder that any one of these factors could lead to the yips? Anyone one of these on its own could make for PhD study in the field of sport psychology. Matt Andrews, a sports therapist and mentor who has worked with snooker and dart players, told me, “in an attempt to achieve our goals, our bodies and brains will sometimes try to help us; by stopping us from doing anything at all.” This is why goals need to be attainable and incremental, not perfect.
This is the origin that dart players may have been less aware of. Focal hand dystonia is a medical term and requires medical diagnosis, but it is known more readily as musician’s or writer’s cramp. It's an unusual neurological condition also referred to as the yips, or dartitis.
It interferes with activities such as writing or playing a musical instrument by causing involuntary muscular contractions. The condition is sometimes “task-specific”, meaning that it is only apparent during certain activities. It is the loss of precise muscle control and/or continuous, unintentional movement which results in cramping and abnormal positioning. It makes continued use of the affected body parts very hard.
The neurological component is this: when the brain tells a given muscle to contract, it simultaneously silences muscles that would oppose the intended movement. It appears that dystonia interferes with the brain’s ability to inhibit those surrounding muscles, leading to loss of selectivity.
For example: in the dart throw, the bicep contracts on the pullback and releases upon action. The tricep conversely releases on pullback and contracts upon action forward. When dystonia takes hold, the neurons controlling opposing muscle groups may actually misfire and all contract at the same time, thus, restricting the release the dart. (It is a physically impossible to follow-through to a straight arm while contracting both muscles simultaneously.) There are also numerous muscles in the forearm that are engaged from posterior and anterior perspectives. This is further complicated by the variance in the wrist action from player to player.
Possible causes: Overuse of specific muscles in a repetitive fashion, especially where there are opposing muscle groups working against each other in rapid-fire succession. Other possible causes: chemical exposure/ingestion (this includes medicines), brain injury, lack of oxygen, and genetic predisposition.
If you have the desire to address the challenge, there are certain lifestyle changes you can control and incorporate into your daily routine to help prevent the yips – or dartitis.
Over time, I have noticed these several factors from other players that are related to getting dartitis. While there's no direct evidence to back up these hypotheses, they are still worth noting as you consider your form, your throw, and your game.
Produced by Connor Cain and Darts Now, this short documentary about dartitis features prolific research on the condition conducted by former women's darts player turned professor Linda Duffy and a guest feature from World Matchplay Champion Beau Greaves. Highly recommend this watch as it goes deeper into the science and psychology of dartitis as a condition.
Aside from lifestyle changes (as mentioned above), here are some general suggestions I'd like to impart to you. These will help you manage your darts play and hopefully prevent the yips from affecting you.
If you are looking for help identifying and addressing your specific issues, there are many resources out there for you, and you can start with me. Remember, you are not alone.
Respectfully,
Dax
Dr. Manhattan