Fundamentals are important. Period. The question is always, when I go to the range by myself, what do I do to get some real training value out of my time? Don't just go through the motions. It needs to be intentional if you want to get better. I really like the idea of just shooting paper at 100 yards, and then look for your personal trends. I would add to this, take a camera and video yourself. Get an angle from the side to show your face, hands, trigger discipline, etc. Then get an angle from behind to show your body alignment. Evaluate yourself and be picky. Let a friend see the footage and pick you apart.
As it pertains to training and competition, I think there will always be two different camps on this topic. One is the competition side and they will always be ok with "playing the game", and there's really nothing wrong with that. The other side is the practical/tactical and they will always feel that the fundamentals, tactics, and fieldcraft are more important. There's nothing wrong with that either. I think, individually, we have to decide what type of shooter we want to be, and then craft our training to help us meet our goals. It's also completely ok if that changes week to week. "Well, I've got a match coming up so my training is going to look a little different than it usually does when I'm thinking about the elk hunting trip".
For myself, I started my precision rifle journey in the competition realm, but my training, education, experience, etc. has brought me to a place where mastery of the fundamentals, tactics, and fieldcraft are way more important to me than finishing on the podium at a national two day PRS/NRL match. That competition environment simply isn't what I'm trying to be good at. Now I use the local club matches to stay sharp and validate skills. The only goal or metric that I place on myself is that I finish in the top 15-20%. If I don't do that consistently, then I know I'm screwing up.
....guess I'm rambling now...my two cents.
As it pertains to training and competition, I think there will always be two different camps on this topic. One is the competition side and they will always be ok with "playing the game", and there's really nothing wrong with that. The other side is the practical/tactical and they will always feel that the fundamentals, tactics, and fieldcraft are more important. There's nothing wrong with that either. I think, individually, we have to decide what type of shooter we want to be, and then craft our training to help us meet our goals. It's also completely ok if that changes week to week. "Well, I've got a match coming up so my training is going to look a little different than it usually does when I'm thinking about the elk hunting trip".
For myself, I started my precision rifle journey in the competition realm, but my training, education, experience, etc. has brought me to a place where mastery of the fundamentals, tactics, and fieldcraft are way more important to me than finishing on the podium at a national two day PRS/NRL match. That competition environment simply isn't what I'm trying to be good at. Now I use the local club matches to stay sharp and validate skills. The only goal or metric that I place on myself is that I finish in the top 15-20%. If I don't do that consistently, then I know I'm screwing up.
....guess I'm rambling now...my two cents.