I have competed with the rifle for forty-five years. My last game was field precision (some friends and I were gears in a big wheel who helped start PRS)Hi,
So in light of some of the other threads in regards to discussions of the precision shooting organizations, rules, procedures, methods, etc etc that are clearly NOT sitting well within the community members here.
I would like to task this thread to be a community talent pool to discuss the real importance of growing the sport.
My opinion is that we must put the growth of the sport over the growth of the industry. My thought process behind that is with growth of the sport the industry grows organically as to organizations pushing for growth of the industry without providing a way to grow the sport actually can cause the growth to become stagnant.
DISCLAIMER: I do not have the answers to some of the recently discussed issues but I am here to say that even though my livelihood is the industry....we need growth of the sport first and foremost.
Individual match participants must be increased in a manner to tap into the common man, woman, girl, transgender, etc etc without them being 1 match and out participants because of perceived equipment cost, perceived "I do not fit in", perceived "it doesn't make me a better shooter/hunter", etc etc.
It may come off as kind of opposite mentality and business model as some of my other discussions on my Hoplite Arms thread in which that business model is to go straight to the top in regards to top tier price and market but that really is different than what IMO needs to be done in regards to growing the precision rifle competition base. By growing that precision rifle competition base the law of numbers will grow some of them into big dollar purchasers.
From my side of the house I am requesting us industry folks get behind growing the sports base ahead of growing our industry market.
Not everyone is going to afford a Hoplite Arms rifle and that is ok with me but that does not mean I do not want to support growing the number of shooters that partake in a precision rifle match.
Not everyone is going to afford a RRS Tripod and head but that does not mean they should be discarded in regards to their importance of overall firearm ownership.
Sincerely,
Theis
Here is my opinion. Stop offering expensive gear as prizes. It takes the fun out of the sport. It aggravates greed. It tempts marksmen to cheat, bribe, etc. there’s another problem with awarding expensive gear.
The marksmen with the most available time to drill, place high, and make the circuit. The same ones always win the gun. An expensive one! They’re getting a free gun to start with by the custom builders. The winner then will sell the prize gun for five thousand dollars ($5000 DOLLARS). The builder is happy with another gun out on the line. The builder is happy to donate the gun to the prize table. It’s a cycle.
Now, I’m referring to PRS matches.
Break it down: sporter rifle, light, heavy custom, caliber, optic; air gun: $200 air gun, $500 air gun…… (leave out pistol. People shoot themselves the the leg).
Pistol and revolver matches.
Do these too. New. Vintage. Separately.
Award a “certified true and correct” copy of the match results, by rank, by marksmen’s names. Take away the money and the politics.