I worked on drifting in practice yesterday evening and these are the results:
My drift was: 1R, 1R, 1.5R, stuck, 1.5R, 3R, 1L, 3R, 2R, 0, 3R. Game 2 was 2R, 2.5R, 2.5R, 1.5R, 2.5R, 2R, 1R, 1R, 1R, 2.5R, 1.5R.
# = boards
R= Right (of starting position)
L = Left (of starting position)
Generally during those two games I was standing left toe on 22-23 targeting around 11 (at the dots). That puts my right toe at about 2-3 boards right of the left toe (roughly center) and if the ball laydown point is 7 boards right of that then the laydown is roughly on board 13. For those that use arrows rather than dots...it's 1.5 to 2 boards difference so lets say laydown is 13 and the ball crosses 11 at the arrows. So that seems in line with what Rob was saying of trying to be within 8 boards of your starting point (starting about 20 and targeting 11 (at the arrows)).
As you can see...my drift is almost ever present and is remarkably consistent (average = exactly 1.5 boards right).
The questions are "why" and whether it's "bad". One school of thought is that as long as it's consistent...it doesn't matter that much. Another line of thought is that sliding right inhibits opening up your angles. It's also a potentially bad thing because it makes it more likely that you'll hit your ankle with the ball (which hurts like MAD).
Part of me thinks that I'm drifting because subconsciously my body wants to square up to the foul line and throw a straight shot...but when I'm too far inside...my target too far right...my body needs to adjust and it subconsciously moves right so it can square up to the foul line. Another theory is (also subconscious) that my mind isn't confident I can open up my angles...so the further left I move, the more my body wants to get back to the right and close that angle down.
So I don't know. Good? Bad? At least it's data. This is why we practice right??

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