10,000
Hours
At the start, Ronnie Rickner was not a darts player. No background, no natural talent — he began from zero. Now he is publicly documenting every hour of the climb to a world top-50 ranking through 10,000 hours of Focused Flow Training. Nothing like this has ever been completed in darts.
Focused Flow Training
Not deliberate practice. Not "put in your reps." A hyper-vigilant state of training where you consciously program mind and body to upgrade the skill while practising. Ronnie's own evolution of Professor Anders Ericsson's deliberate practice theory — built after Ericsson passed away in 2022, carrying their planned collaboration forward.
Skills develop physically. You grow the neural circuits that produce the desired outcome. Once the body has adapted, the mind can be pushed further — compounded by adrenaline, competition, supplementation, and progressive loading. The same principles apply to any skill.
Full methodologyTrain Your Weaknesses First
Every session begins with the part of your game you are worst at — not the part you enjoy. The doubles you miss. The checkouts you fear. Most players do the exact opposite. They rehearse what already works, which is why they plateau.
Measure Everything
Track average per session. Checkout percentage. Miss direction on doubles. You cannot improve what you do not measure. The data shows what feel hides — and it reveals patterns you would never spot in real time.
Simulate Pressure in Practice
Pressure is a skill. You build it by practising under competition conditions — against a clock, against a target, against yourself. Players who only play in comfort zones perform below that comfort zone on stage.
Recover Like an Athlete
Sleep, nutrition, and physical conditioning are not peripheral. They are the infrastructure that allows everything else to compound. Focused Flow Training without recovery is just fatigue accumulation.
"The 10,000-hour rule is a misrepresentation. Mastery is about quality of practice — not hours."
Professor Anders Ericsson — pioneer of deliberate practice theory at Florida State University — worked with Ronnie from 2020 on what genuine deliberate practice would look like applied to darts. They planned to co-author a book. Ericsson passed away in June 2022. Ronnie carries the work forward.
Prof. Anders Ericsson · Florida State University · 1947–2022The Feed
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The methodology that drives the experiment is available to players at every level. Focused Flow Training is not theoretical — it has been built, tested, and documented across thousands of hours of live practice.