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8-Room Domination: Angles, Corners & Coverage

Room domination isn’t about speed or aggression—it’s about control. Angles, corners, and coverage define whether your team clears or collides.


Control wins fights; chaos loses them.Once a team commits to the entry, domination means taking control of every space, every corner, every line of sight—without tripping over each other or wasting motion.


1. The Angle Is Your World

  • Every operator owns a slice—what you see, you control.

  • Don’t chase targets outside your slice; trust your teammates to own theirs.

  • When you shift, call it—silent or verbal—so coverage never breaks.

Overlapping angles waste eyes; uncovered angles invite risk.


2. Corners Decide The Room

  • Corners hide surprises. Clear them deliberately and from control, not curiosity.

  • Keep weapon and vision aligned—don’t lead with one or the other.

  • Don’t fight the corner alone; team coordination keeps the sweep safe.

Corners are where mistakes turn into contact.


3. Coverage Is Not Comfort

  • Once you own a sector, hold it. Don’t drift toward “what looks interesting.”

  • The moment you turn away from your slice, you create a blind spot.

  • Communicate before shifting or moving.

Coverage discipline keeps the team secure and efficient.


4. Flow and Tempo

  • Move in balance: fast enough to control, slow enough to think.

  • Teams that move in rhythm stay predictable to each other.

  • Sudden changes in tempo cause confusion; communicate every stop and push.

Predictability inside the team equals unpredictability to opponents.


5. Trust Your Sector Partners

  • Never reach into another operator’s responsibility without reason.

  • The line between teamwork and interference is thin—stay disciplined.

  • Trust builds tempo; ego breaks it.

Each operator’s stability supports the team’s dominance.


Final Word

Room domination is discipline, not aggression.Angles define survival, corners define awareness, and coverage defines control.When every operator respects their slice, the room belongs to the team.

Remember: clear with purpose, not pride.

 
 
 

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