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Armed and Gregarious |
A very wise person once said: Under stress, a person does not rise to the level of their expectations, they will fall to the level of their training. Training should be: Crawl, Walk, Run. That should mean crawling until you are nearly perfect, then walking until you are nearly perfect, then start running. The problem is many people want to skip the "Crawl," and "Walk," because frankly it's boring, and go straight to "Run." As a result they suck at "Running." Some others will do nothing other than "Crawl," and as a result, they too will suck at "Running." If all you ever do is crawl, you won't suddenly "be fast" under stress. ___________________________________________ "He was never hindered by any dogma, except the Constitution." - Ty Ross speaking of his grandfather General Barry Goldwater "War is the remedy that our enemies have chosen, and I say let us give them all they want." - William Tecumseh Sherman | |||
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Member |
If one receives The American Rifleman or Shooting Illustrated official NRA publications there is a column in each issue titled "The Armed Citizen". Thou not rich in depth thus detail of the incidents. The willingness to be combative was apparently more important than expertise in weapon handling. I'm not saying the ability to handle a weapon is not important but the willingness to be combative seems to be the more important of the two. My shooting experience thus combative experience is and was the military. My MOS dictated my personal weapon a 1911-A1 which I used an escaped with my life as opposed to my opponent. I learned the lesson that generations before me learned a handgun is a nice supplement to a rifle. If a person see's as an example IDPA is a training venue their welcome to that viewpoint. | |||
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Member |
Here is another take; Two guys face each other at 7 yards, they both draw and shot at each other. One gets the shot off at 1.0 seconds and delivers a center mass shot. The other guy gets his shot off at 1.3 seconds and delivers a center mass shot. What is the end result? They are both shot. Now we take two USPSA/IDPA/ISPC etc... shooters and have them face their target at 7 yards. One gets his shot off in 1.0 seconds and delivers an A Zone/O down shot. The other guys gets his shot off in 1.3 seconds and gets an A Zone/0 down shot. What is the end result? The first guy wins the game. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tomorrow's battle is won during today's practice. | |||
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Armed and Gregarious |
Frankly the odds of continuing to deliver an accurate shot 0.3 seconds after being hit center mass are really low. Also, since some folks are capable of about 0.2 second splits, the odds of someone continuing to deliver an accurate shot 0.3 seconds after being hit by one round, and 0.1 seconds after being hit by a second round, are even lower. ___________________________________________ "He was never hindered by any dogma, except the Constitution." - Ty Ross speaking of his grandfather General Barry Goldwater "War is the remedy that our enemies have chosen, and I say let us give them all they want." - William Tecumseh Sherman | |||
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Member |
Unfortunately for us, the bad guys don't wait for the buzzer. "Go" will occur at the time of their choosing that stacks the odds in their favor. We will be up against much larger time and position disadvantages right from the start. Being slower is sure not going to help, but I doubt that a few tenths under ideal conditions would translate to the same in real life. | |||
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Member |
When you start [and continue] shooting at someone, you have to assume you’re going to kill them. That’s why we call it ‘deadly force.’ Doing so needs to be a decision not a reflex. Claude Werner /The Tactical Professor | |||
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Member |
Engage the threat, until it's no longer a threat. Fast, slow, sights, no sights, up close, or at distance. Do what you have to do. ______________________________ Men who carry guns for a living do not seek reward outside of the guild. The most cherished gift is a nod from his peers. | |||
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Member |
I use a shot timer at my local range. I get a lot of raised eyebrows because being a "faster shot and a "better" shot are two different things. My reply s if I can do it accurately faster isn't that better? I have never been in a gunfight it it would take a hell of a lot of evidence to convince me that getting quality shots on target first isn't the way to go. | |||
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posting without pants |
I understand both points, and honestly, I believe the truth is in the middle. Bruce Lee talked about muscle memory. He said you had to do something approximately 10,000 times for it to truly be "muscle memory." Now, I don't know about the number, but there IS truth to that. If a shooter does not have a basic grasp of the fundamentals, they will be at a HUGE disadvantage. That is pretty much impossible to argue with. You MUST be able to preform a solid grip, draw, presentation, find the sights, and lock out in order to shoot accurately. If you have no concept of the basics, you will fail under stress. If you have NEVER practiced under stress, you will be slow. Choosing ONLY ONE method of training/practice is setting up for failure. In other words, you can take a novice shooter and make him miss fast, or take a bullseye shooter and make him hit slow. YOU MUST TRAIN BOTH. But IMO, YOU MUST TRAIN FUNDAMENTALS FIRST. If you can do the fundamentals each and every time under stress, then you can start to speed up. Once you have that, speed it up, and train faster. In the martial arts training I've taken, I'd learned this... If you can't do it correctly, you can't do it. If you have to have it slowed down to do it correctly... YOU CANNOT DO IT CORRECTLY FAST ENOUGH. Start out slow and master it properly. Then add speed. Either extreme is a fool's errand IMO. Strive to live your life so when you wake up in the morning and your feet hit the floor, the devil says "Oh crap, he's up." | |||
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posting without pants |
DMF says it much more briefly than I did. Strive to live your life so when you wake up in the morning and your feet hit the floor, the devil says "Oh crap, he's up." | |||
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Sigforum K9 handler |
If I am reading what you are saying correctly, the NRA magazine shows people that are LUCKY. There is no correlation to skill, willingness, etc. Your local paper has the same type of data. Over the years it is full of dead people. Many of which share attributes with the people from the NRA magazine. They just met some one luckier. It reminds me of people who do their financial planning with hitting the lottery penciled in as their retirement ideas. Fast hits, fellas. You can do all the other stuff, wax poetic, etc. But, at the end of the day, it comes down to be able to hit stuff quickly. I also smell just a hint of "COMPETITION KILLS" in this post. I chuckle a bit when that comes up. When you look at all of the guys that have retired from real deal Tier One outfits in the last 10 years, they all say the same thing. Competition is a great way to test your skills. Hell, when Pat Mac was the NCOIC of the Firearms branch at the Unit, he coordinated competitions on base and off base so his guys could get better. Larry Vickers, Kyle Lamb, Frank Proctor, Pat Mac, Kyle Defoor, and the list goes on. All guys that will tell you that competition doesn't kill, and that fast hits matter. | |||
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Member |
I still do not think that is what Clint is saying (but only he can clarify). He states he has students that show up and all they want to do is go fast. Speedy inaccuracy is not much good. Learn to shoot. Learn to shoot fast. Learn to shoot and move. Building blocks. NRA Life Member "Do what you can, with what you have, where you are." Teddy Roosevelt | |||
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