So over the Contrived and Repetitive Nature of Stages today

This here.

I have not competed at all any shooting contest. I have had to shoot in a test for a commission to carry a firearm on duty. And more recently, shoot to have an LTC. But that is not this.

I have not competed in any long range or PRS matches. I get the problem, though. It is becoming more about equipment and what the winners are getting good at is bagging a 30 lb rifle with the smallest recoil. Which is only good for that contest. And then, no one is offering the idea, even, to "grow the sport" by offering training pathways to get new people into the sport. And those new people may not have a lot of money. Therefore, they might very well arrive with a Ruger Precision Rifle or something they could afford and getting laughed at by the gucci purse swingers is just going to piss them off.

So, for me, how useful is the positional shooting at distance? Obviously, it has a military use for snipers in the Marines, Rangers, SF, SEALs.

Excluding much of the sneaky bastard work, at least set up shots where you have a hide and are rested. And then the next stage is hump a distance and up some stairs or a ladder to an elevated platform and be a DM and you need to make a shot within a time limit. And that would definitely require training. You could spend 10k on a rig and it won't help a bit if you don't have the mechanical ability to operate the system.

I don't begrudge bench rest or even cut-and-paste barricade PRS shooting. It beats selling crack cocaine.

How about improvised positions one might find while hunting if we cannot train as something similar to SOTIC in the Rangers?

I know I am just spitballing. I am still the stupidest guy here and that does not bother me. And I may misunderstood the OP post.

Anyone can correct me and I will not be bothered by it.
JMHO, but the big issue is no one wants to put in the work.

Our club matches have a lot of variety in positions, but it takes time and work to build out those positions. Even at our club, shooters comment on wanting something new, but when I call for help....everyone is busy. So there I am, a slightly disabled person, swinging a pickaxe and a shovel, diggin positions, filling sandbags, lining pits with plastic and sandbags, and filling with water hauled in on a SxS using a water bladder bought off amazon. Or digging and building a bunker of sandbags on the back side of a berm. Or laying paths between trees, and setting up a position under an overhanging tree. Lasing targets, and setting up stage CoF's. It all takes time. And work. Hard, physical work.

Don't get me wrong, I love it, seeing shooters trying to figure out the stages (I love messing with them by using defilade shots; both positive and negative), and eyeball the CoF/stage. Makes for a lot of enjoyment by all. But it takes time and work, and after a while you kinda get tired of being the one that puts in all the work building the positions, while everyone else is "busy". I kinda have a day job too, but somehow manage to make it work....

Then you have the shooters that drop out of the match the night before, because they heard (or were warned) that their gear is going to get muddy/dirty ("Bring a towel for your ride home, you're going to get dirty tomorrow"). Sorts out the wheat from the chaff though....
 
No ones asking to crawl through a water mud pit lol
It applies to just a simple rain forecast also. I invariably get all kinds of ‘emergency’ withdrawals the night before if rain is a possibility. A lot of fair weather shooters out there.

And @MarinePMI is right about nobody being available to help setup or create new obstacles/shooting positions. Many will ask you if there’s anything they can do to help out, until you actually contact them for help. Then they’re ‘busy’.
 
It applies to just a simple rain forecast also. I invariably get all kinds of ‘emergency’ withdrawals the night before if rain is a possibility. A lot of fair weather shooters out there.

And @MarinePMI is right about nobody being available to help setup or create new obstacles/shooting positions. Many will ask you if there’s anything they can do to help out, until you actually contact them for help. Then they’re ‘busy’.
Exactly.

As to our "pit of despair", yeah people didn't ask to crawl through the mud. But they want to walk around like they're "shooters". Everyone wants to do hoodrat shit, until it's time to do hoodrat shit. Smh...and no one at our club ever knew I got heat stroke digging that damned pit. Scared the shit out of the Range Assistant Manager (Al) when I started losing consciousness. They thought they were going to have to call an ambulance, but got my core temperature down pretty fast, hosing me down with water, and driving me around in the SxS at high speed. But again, most didn't know...because no one ever showed up to help, and I wasn't going to whine about it. <shrug> I just haven't put in as much physical labor since, trying to set up new target presentations.
 
I wish all you people who think shooting in rain and mud and cold is just fine had spent time with me on Peason Ridge in 1970. (Much less highlands of Viet Nam in 1971)

Setting up and running matches, setting and resetting targets in the middle of the Louisiana summer with minimal or zero attendance, caused us to get out of the match business. We busted our ass, lost enough pre-biden dollars, and generally despite our best efforts accomplished little or maybe nothing for the sport. That made us believers, enough is enough.

But remember, it’s supposed to be fun. If your idea that suffering is a definition of fun, may I recommend a good psychiatrist. Better yet a whole fucking hospital of psychiatrist. Remember, people are paying their post biden dollars to attend your match. Making a tough sport miserable, is not going to endear you to the paying public.

Two stories here.
Give the Match Directors some help. Otherwise, they’ll be gone
Match Directors, its their dollars, its their time, both are limited, think about what they like, not what you want to impose.

I’m a Time Trialist. Time Trialist live in the pain cave, so yes I suppose I do need a whole hospital of psychiatrist, for my own self.
 
As a non member because I refuse to travel more than two hours so chasing season points is futile:
My biggest issue with two day prs matches is 1) the price and 2) how many people there are.
If you lower 1, 2 increases which means more time waiting in lines.
If you raise 1, 2 decreases and I’m one of them because it’s too expensive which it’s looking like is going to happen this next year.

I will admit I’m a fair weather shooter, I’m not going to pay for the privilege of being miserable. I will wait to sign up until the forecast is out and positive.
And if I do show up and it turns nasty I’ll just skip a stage if it equals standing in a puddle of water. My socks will stay dry.

I dont necessarily think that training newbies should be the concern of the prs series, if someone doesn’t know how to shoot and shows up to a 300 dollar 2 day national level match then they should expect to get their teeth kicked in.

I don’t mind being a squad mom and herding the newbies at a club match though… but to say I prefer doing that over shooting with my group of friends would be a blatant lie.

The biggest issue with new shooters is motivation. People ask me to get into shooting all the time, not even matches. I tell them show up Saturday at the ranch at 9 am, I get maybe two people a year take me up on it and they rarely ever come back. I got the rifles and ammo. They don’t like waking up before noon and driving 10 minutes out of town.
The second biggest is money because kids ruin peoples lives lol
 
The biggest issue with new shooters is motivation. People ask me to get into shooting all the time, not even matches. I tell them show up Saturday at the ranch at 9 am, I get maybe two people a year take me up on it and they rarely ever come back. I got the rifles and ammo. They don’t like waking up before noon and driving 10 minutes out of town.
The second biggest is money because kids ruin peoples lives lol
This is true as well. I always invite others to the range for shooting sessions. Everyone is a long range shooter or wants to learn until it’s time to show up. Then it’s the wife, the kids, etc.

I’m not sure if it’s a time issue or intimidation factor but the struggle is real.
 
Someone build it, and they will come. Talk is easy, no one wants to build the best shooting game.

Plus, no matter what you do, watching shooting sports will always be more boring then staring at the new seasons of the Simpkins.
 
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I wish all you people who think shooting in rain and mud and cold is just fine had spent time with me on Peason Ridge in 1970. (Much less highlands of Viet Nam in 1971)

Setting up and running matches, setting and resetting targets in the middle of the Louisiana summer with minimal or zero attendance, caused us to get out of the match business. We busted our ass, lost enough pre-biden dollars, and generally despite our best efforts accomplished little or maybe nothing for the sport. That made us believers, enough is enough.

But remember, it’s supposed to be fun. If your idea that suffering is a definition of fun, may I recommend a good psychiatrist. Better yet a whole fucking hospital of psychiatrist. Remember, people are paying their post biden dollars to attend your match. Making a tough sport miserable, is not going to endear you to the paying public.

Two stories here.
Give the Match Directors some help. Otherwise, they’ll be gone
Match Directors, its their dollars, its their time, both are limited, think about what they like, not what you want to impose.

I’m a Time Trialist. Time Trialist live in the pain cave, so yes I suppose I do need a whole hospital of psychiatrist, for my own self.
Suffering is part of the point. In fact, that lack of people willing to suffer to become proficient at things, is partly what's wrong with this current generation. But that's my personal opinion. And don't think you have a monopoly on suffering in combat; there are many here who have had similar experiences in a lot of shitty places around the world.

Without paying a personal price for something, the value of that something is diminished. Much like any other thing in life. I'm glad you didn't show up to the Hide Cup in 2015. That was a classic case of suffering through the cold and rain. Or the Big Horn Steel match in 2019, where it was 26* the second morning, and everything was frozen solid. The day before it was 34* and pissing down rain all day. And yes, both of the matches were great. Not because the weather sucked, but because it pushed people to overcome their physical discomfort to still perform at a high level.


Or as the saying goes "I'd rather suffer in good company, than live comfortably surrounded by delicate men."
 
Suffering is part of the point. In fact, that lack of people willing to suffer to become proficient at things, is partly what's wrong with this current generation. But that's my personal opinion. And don't think you have a monopoly on suffering in combat; there are many here who have had similar experiences in a lot of shitty places around the world.

Without paying a personal price for something, the value of that something is diminished. Much like any other thing in life. I'm glad you didn't show up to the Hide Cup in 2015. That was a classic case of suffering through the cold and rain. Or the Big Horn Steel match in 2019, where it was 26* the second morning, and everything was frozen solid. The day before it was 34* and pissing down rain all day. And yes, both of the matches were great. Not because the weather sucked, but because it pushed people to overcome their physical discomfort to still perform at a high level.


Or as the saying goes "I'd rather suffer in good company, than live comfortably surrounded by delicate men."
I’m sorry but I cannot agree. You don’t go to contests to learn how to suffer to get good. You go to contest/competition to win

To win, you practice, you preserver, you sacrifice, so that on game day, whatever the game is, you can win. Practice, preparation is where the suffering and sacrifice Should Occur. If conditions in the game go bad, that’s that. However, you make the contest hard, to make it worth it, not to make people suffer so you can sit back in your easy chair after the “game” and feel good that people fell bad.
 
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Its all about the fun scale...:ROFLMAO:
 
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Suffering is part of the point. In fact, that lack of people willing to suffer to become proficient at things, is partly what's wrong with this current generation. But that's my personal opinion. And don't think you have a monopoly on suffering in combat; there are many here who have had similar experiences in a lot of shitty places around the world.

Without paying a personal price for something, the value of that something is diminished. Much like any other thing in life. I'm glad you didn't show up to the Hide Cup in 2015. That was a classic case of suffering through the cold and rain. Or the Big Horn Steel match in 2019, where it was 26* the second morning, and everything was frozen solid. The day before it was 34* and pissing down rain all day. And yes, both of the matches were great. Not because the weather sucked, but because it pushed people to overcome their physical discomfort to still perform at a high level.


Or as the saying goes "I'd rather suffer in good company, than live comfortably surrounded by delicate men."
The match is no longer running? Doesn't that prove that everyone wants to live comfortably surrounded by delicate men?

Suffering sucks. Unless your david goggins and getting after it everyday, the talk of suffering is cheeeaaaaap.
 
FYI
I’m guy responsible for the $300 price tag on a match

But we were also paying for gas for the helicopter we always had. The issue is, nobody adjusted for reality. I did it cause I could I knew we already had a full match based on the students from the classes.

The SHC slots used to sell out in a minute cuz there was only 10 open spots, everyone else was on a list from the classes. So I understood the market and my customers.

At the high point, guys would arrive on Sunday, Monday to Wednesday was the train up, Thursday we set up the range and Friday to Sunday we shot. We’d have 25 in the train up doing that.

Plus we had a $250k prize table a DQ’d shooter who hung around got $1000 off the table, that was the minimum. You paid $300, I guaranteed you $1000 in swag or prizes to leave. Plus shirts, food, etc. it’s why they still give SHC matches props

We always changed up at least 3 stages a yr.
 
Setting up and running matches, setting and resetting targets in the middle of the Louisiana summer with minimal or zero attendance, caused us to get out of the match business. We busted our ass, lost enough pre-biden dollars, and generally despite our best efforts accomplished little or maybe nothing for the sport. That made us believers, enough is enough.


I refuse to run centerfire matches in AZ June to November for that reason.

I set up a NRL hunter games match by myself in May last year. Zero help, everyone was busy.
Match day one fucking guy showed up from the 15 that signed up. Told him I guess you and I are battling for 1-2 place and we shot it anyhow.
 
FYI
I’m guy responsible for the $300 price tag on a match

But we were also paying for gas for the helicopter we always had. The issue is, nobody adjusted for reality. I did it cause I could I knew we already had a full match based on the students from the classes.

The SHC slots used to sell out in a minute cuz there was only 10 open spots, everyone else was on a list from the classes. So I understood the market and my customers.

At the high point, guys would arrive on Sunday, Monday to Wednesday was the train up, Thursday we set up the range and Friday to Sunday we shot. We’d have 25 in the train up doing that.

Plus we had a $250k prize table a DQ’d shooter who hung around got $1000 off the table, that was the minimum. You paid $300, I guaranteed you $1000 in swag or prizes to leave. Plus shirts, food, etc. it’s why they still give SHC matches props

We always changed up at least 3 stages a yr.
Start again in CO. Let’s goooo
 
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To show how much he PRS cares about its shooters they postponed the regional Rimfire finale match at Clinton house today a whole two hours after the whole area was decimated by a storm yesterday. No hotels or power in the nearby town and people can’t make it but hey the PRS cares. Lol
It stormed round here?
 
FYI
I’m guy responsible for the $300 price tag on a match

But we were also paying for gas for the helicopter we always had. The issue is, nobody adjusted for reality. I did it cause I could I knew we already had a full match based on the students from the classes.

The SHC slots used to sell out in a minute cuz there was only 10 open spots, everyone else was on a list from the classes. So I understood the market and my customers.

At the high point, guys would arrive on Sunday, Monday to Wednesday was the train up, Thursday we set up the range and Friday to Sunday we shot. We’d have 25 in the train up doing that.

Plus we had a $250k prize table a DQ’d shooter who hung around got $1000 off the table, that was the minimum. You paid $300, I guaranteed you $1000 in swag or prizes to leave. Plus shirts, food, etc. it’s why they still give SHC matches props

We always changed up at least 3 stages a yr.

It would really great if you and Chris Way did something together.

There’s absolutely an appetite among shooters for alternatives to PRS. The success of NRL Hunter, team matches like Major Land & the Chaos Concepts events, DMR competitions, and of course Competition Dynamics shows this.

With your history and knowledge base and Chris’s creativity and unique perspectives, you guys could do something really unique and interesting. An event that would be challenging, fresh, and a ton of fun.

No bullshit. The old school stuff does sound like a ton of fun. Maybe it’s time to bring it back, with a little modern twist (like Marathons).
 
It would really great if you and Chris Way did something together.

There’s absolutely an appetite among shooters for alternatives to PRS. The success of NRL Hunter, team matches like Major Land & the Chaos Concepts events, DMR competitions, and of course Competition Dynamics shows this.

With your history and knowledge base and Chris’s creativity and unique perspectives, you guys could do something really unique and interesting. An event that would be challenging, fresh, and a ton of fun.

No bullshit. The old school stuff does sound like a ton of fun. Maybe it’s time to bring it back, with a little modern twist (like Marathons).
And thanks for clearing up some of my ignorance. I did not realize there are DMR competitions.
 
And thanks for clearing up some of my ignorance. I did not realize there are DMR competitions.

There are more than a few, and they're a hoot:

 
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There are more than a few, and they're a hoot:

My primary activity is hunting on public land. While I have never been a DM or served, I think the idea of improvised shooting positions is important to me.

Having read the memoirs of snipers, I know there are times where you set up a hide and have time to rest.

And another time, you are engaged in a fight and you hump up your portable ladder to a roof top and set up to start taking out bad guys. So, breathing ragged, pulse elevated, sweating like a whore in church on Sunday. And still make the shots.
 
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My primary activity is hunting on public land. While I have never been a DM or served, I think the idea of improvised shooting positions is important to me.

Having read the memoirs of snipers, I know there are times where you set up a hide and have time to rest.

And another time, you are engaged in a fight and you hump up you portable ladder to a roof top and set up to start taking out bad guys. So, breathing ragged, pulse elevated, sweating like a whore in church on Sunday. And still make the shots.
I think the elephant in the room when discussing PRS type matches is rifle overall weight. Put a 10-12 lbs limit in place and everything changes. Non solid props and we are back to hunting style stuff. Sure, mostly the same people will win, but it’s a shooter skill race more than a gear thing. Problem is, shooter skill is tougher to develop than gear is to purchase.
 
I think there’s a big psychological toll that comes into play as well. The sport/hobby is extremely addicting and requires so much time, effort, and money to truly reach a high level.

I’d be lying if I didn’t feel some sense of regret after not doing as well as I’d hoped at a match driving home 5-6+ hrs away after not spending time with family that whole weekend (plus all the practice and lead up to the match).

At least for me, it can really weigh heavy at times when you look at the pros and cons of how you just spent your time + money + energy vs. just staying local for a range trip rather than a whole weekend away.

Don’t get me wrong, competing is a blast and tons of fun to travel to new places to meet new faces…but this sport/hobby is continually requires some pretty big sacrifices to compete at a high level.

I genuinely believe it’s why you hear the lifespan of PRS Pro’s only being 3-4 years these days.

Relating my ramble to the OP intent of stage variation…I do think MD’s are in a tough spot trying to find the balance of making COF’s approachable for the mid to low skill shooters, while also providing a challenge for the top tier. I think this is what fuels the dissatisfaction and boredom for so many people around NRL, etc.
 
I’m sorry but that is pure bullshit. You don’t go to contests to learn how to suffer to get good. You go to contest/competition to win

To win, you practice, you preserver, you sacrifice, so that on game day, whatever the game is, you can win. Practice, preparation is where the suffering and sacrifice Should Occur. If conditions in the game go bad, that’s that. However, you make the contest hard, to make it worth it, not to make people suffer so you can sit back in your easy chair after the “game” and feel good that people fell bad.
Nope. But I'm beginning to think you're pure bullshit (or have no idea what you're talking about). But that's just MHO.

So answer me this genius. If you don't practice how to suffer while still competing well, how do you expect to perform when shit goes sideways?

Life never goes the way it should, so you practice for that eventuality. Otherwise, you're just practicing for optimum conditions. Anything else and you're not really pushing yourself to handle any situation.

I think the part you're missing is that club matches are training validation contests, designed to tell you if you're prepared to move to a higher level...even in poor or inclement conditions.

But, what do I know?

And yes, our matches continue to be held, and I'd argue, our club has an abnormally large group of very competitive shooters at the National level.
 
did not realize there are DMR competitions.
Geissele/ Drew Walter have monthly ones at tremont. It’s a great time and they raffle off a rifle , a couple uppers and a bunch of handguards and triggers at the end of each one.


Highly recommend
611A45C0-1C9D-4CBF-83E7-766E44F169BF.jpeg
 
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I may be no genus but you have not understood what I wrote and was trying to convey.

To quote my post…”To win, you practice, you preserver, you sacrifice, so that on game day, whatever the game is, you can win. Practice, preparation is where the suffering and sacrifice Should Occur”.

Also wrote “If conditions in the game go bad, that’s that.” (Because you trained / practiced for that).

There is an old war fighter saying. You Train like you Fight and you Fight like you Train.

You and I are obviously not on the same wavelength because we now seem to be arguing the same point at each other.


Nope. But I'm beginning to think you're pure bullshit (or have no idea what you're talking about). But that's just MHO.

So answer me this genius. If you don't practice how to suffer while still competing well, how do you expect to perform when shit goes sideways?

Life never goes the way it should, so you practice for that eventuality. Otherwise, you're just practicing for optimum conditions. Anything else and you're not really pushing yourself to handle any situation.

I think the part you're missing is that club matches are training validation contests, designed to tell you if you're prepared to move to a higher level...even in poor or inclement conditions.

But, what do I know?

And yes, our matches continue to be held, and I'd argue, our club has an abnormally large group of very competitive shooters at the National level.
 
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Nope. But I'm beginning to think you're pure bullshit (or have no idea what you're talking about). But that's just MHO.

So answer me this genius. If you don't practice how to suffer while still competing well, how do you expect to perform when shit goes sideways?

Life never goes the way it should, so you practice for that eventuality. Otherwise, you're just practicing for optimum conditions. Anything else and you're not really pushing yourself to handle any situation.

I think the part you're missing is that club matches are training validation contests, designed to tell you if you're prepared to move to a higher level...even in poor or inclement conditions.

But, what do I know?

And yes, our matches continue to be held, and I'd argue, our club has an abnormally large group of very competitive shooters at the National level.
cat-duckling boot gif.gif



R
 
So I believe Frank hits the nail on the head on a few points. One thing I've noticed this year strictly on the regional level is just how tight and far down the points are this year for the central region. Like having 9 shooters at 300. This was not this case last year. In my opinion on the regional level we are having too many qualifier matches and too many matches in general. This is only my second year competing in PRS matches and I've had a pretty decent year in my opinion for my skill level. For example I have,

2-2nd place finishes
1-6th place @qualifier
1-5th that has better points than my 2nd places finishes

I think I'm currently 72nd in the central region right now. You can creep on my shooter profile on PRS I don't have anything to prove to anyone. But to be 72nd is just a kick in the nuts in my opinion with those kind of scores. So my question is are we putting out too many qualifiers on the schedule??

Another topic I wanna bring up that I'm sure will really stir the pot. What's everyone's opinion on shooters with 300 season points still competing in regional matches while other people are really grinding for points or their first match win?
 
So I believe Frank hits the nail on the head on a few points. One thing I've noticed this year strictly on the regional level is just how tight and far down the points are this year for the central region. Like having 9 shooters at 300. This was not this case last year. In my opinion on the regional level we are having too many qualifier matches and too many matches in general. This is only my second year competing in PRS matches and I've had a pretty decent year in my opinion for my skill level. For example I have,

2-2nd place finishes
1-6th place @qualifier
1-5th that has better points than my 2nd places finishes

I think I'm currently 72nd in the central region right now. You can creep on my shooter profile on PRS I don't have anything to prove to anyone. But to be 72nd is just a kick in the nuts in my opinion with those kind of scores. So my question is are we putting out too many qualifiers on the schedule??

Another topic I wanna bring up that I'm sure will really stir the pot. What's everyone's opinion on shooters with 300 season points still competing in regional matches while other people are really grinding for points or their first match win?


Wait...what?
 
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@EbTac, You sound like you’re whining because your two 2nds, a fifth, and a sixth place didn’t place you in the top ten. That’s not how it works.

You’re shooting good for your second year, but those top guys that already have their points are practicing and competing every match so that they’ll be ready for finals.

Would you set on your laurels if you were possibly in contention at the finals?

Or do you feel that they should just set it out to “make it fair”?
 
@EbTac, You sound like you’re whining because your two 2nds, a fifth, and a sixth place didn’t place you in the top ten. That’s not how it works.

You’re shooting good for your second year, but those top guys that already have their points are practicing and competing every match so that they’ll be ready for finals.

Would you set on your laurels if you were possibly in contention at the finals?

Or do you feel that they should just set it out to “make it fair”?
Haha no I'm definitely not whining. I'm pretty happy how I've competed this year on the regional level especially the shooters I've had to compete against.

No I don't think they should sit out of matches at all. Idk I'm probably way out of line here, but I feel if I was at that level and sitting at 300 points I'd still go compete to stay on point but I think the right thing to do would be telling the match director hey don't submitt my scores for today I'm just here for practice. Just my 2 cents that don't matter at all. I'll be honest it does suck to show up to a 1 day match and just get skull drug by pros on a monthly basis.

I will probably never have the time nor the resources to be able to shoot at a pro skill level.

I'm not whining by any means. I'm extremely happy for those guys that hit 300 and are extremely successful at every match they go to. They earned it. They put in that time and got very good. Just makes it difficult to show up to a match and get good points when 1st place beats 2nd place by 10 to 12 shots.
 
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Haha no I'm definitely not whining. I'm pretty happy how I've competed this year on the regional level especially the shooters I've had to compete against.

No I don't think they should sit out of matches at all. Idk I'm probably way out of line here, but I feel if I was at that level and sitting at 300 points I'd still go compete to stay on point but I think the right thing to do would be telling the match director hey don't submitt my scores for today I'm just here for practice. Just my 2 cents that don't matter at all. I'll be honest it does suck to show up to a 1 day match and just get skull drug by pros on a monthly basis.

I will probably never have the time nor the resources to be able to shoot at a pro skill level.

I'm not whining by any means. I'm extremely happy for those guys that hit 300 and are extremely successful at every match they go to. They earned it. They put in that time and got very good. Just makes it difficult to show up to a match and get good points when 1st place beats 2nd place by 10 to 12 shots.

How long have these "Pros" been shooting competitively?

Man, being ranked 72nd in your region during only your second year is something to be proud of, not frustrated by. You're legitimately in the top 25% in a seriously competitive part of the county. Be proud of that, don't tarnish it by complaining that there are too many matches or too many competitive shooters in your area.

You've shot what, 10 regional matches this year? Keep doing that, combined with some deliberate and regular practice, and you should improve pretty rapidly. Maybe a class with the JTAC boys, if you haven't done that already.
 
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How long have these "Pros" been shooting competitively?

Man, being ranked 72nd in your region during only your second year is something to be proud of, not frustrated by. You're legitimately in the top 25% in a seriously competitive part of the county. Be proud of that, don't tarnish it by complaining that there are too many matches or too many competitive shooters in your area.

You've shot what, 10 regional matches this year? Keep doing that, combined with some deliberate and regular practice, and you should improve pretty rapidly. Maybe a class with the JTAC boys, if you haven't done that already.
Your not wrong trust me. Just wanted to bring up a talking point. Like one point no one has touched on is the amount of qualifier matches we had on schedule this year. Is more better? Or is less better quality?
 
Setting up and running matches, setting and resetting targets in the middle of the Louisiana summer with minimal or zero attendance, caused us to get out of the match business. We busted our ass, lost enough pre-biden dollars, and generally despite our best efforts accomplished little or maybe nothing for the sport. That made us believers, enough is enough.
Where were you running these matches and when?