***this is not intended for more experienced shooters as most of this is a given at that point***
So, after reading countless threads about practice and such, as well as scouring through 50+ matches, I’ve narrowed down to two things novice to intermediate skill level shooters should focus on that will drastically improve their match placement/performance.
1: Dope (Prone)
2: 100yd positional shooting off props
For example, the last match I shot there were two stages that had the most amount of top 10 match placement in the top 10 for the stage. The 900yd stage and the 100yd paper stage. The rest of the stages had some random amount of mid pack shooters mixed into the top 10 for the stage.
Dope is obvious. If you don’t have good dope, you can’t begin to expect to do well in a match.
Fundamentals goes hand in hand with dope. As you cannot record good data if your shots are not consistent. So, you MUST have good fundamentals to expect good data.
Moving to positional shooting off props. You absolutely MUST be able to build stable positions to do well in prs style matches. Shooting these at 100yds removes wind from the equation. So there is zero reason other than the shooter or the rifle if you are not able to perform @ 100yds.
The MOST OVERRATED skill for a *novice to intermediate* shooter is the ability to read wind. You could read wind down to 1mph and if you don’t have proper fundamentals/dope/position, you’ll never be consistent.
If you missed the first shot on every stage in a match, but you were able to see your shot, make a proper correction, and hit the rest of the shots......you’d be an upper pack shooter. In a local match, that would only be 7-10 dropped shots (7-10 stages) on average. That’s all with ZERO wind reading ability. Obviously some matches with switchy winds would skew the results. I’m speaking generally.
So, for the novice to intermediate shooters, here is my suggestion for training/practice:
1: absolutely hammer the fundamentals until you’re sick of it (get proper instruction and take classes)
2: have absolute rock solid dope
3: practice @ 100yds only. 1” and 2” dot drills. Prone and positional off props. You can get away with just a prs barricade if need be.
Do not stress about needing 4-800yds to practice. I’ll quote Erik Cortina here......if you can’t shoot tiny groups at 100, what makes you think you can do it at 1000?
So, after reading countless threads about practice and such, as well as scouring through 50+ matches, I’ve narrowed down to two things novice to intermediate skill level shooters should focus on that will drastically improve their match placement/performance.
1: Dope (Prone)
2: 100yd positional shooting off props
For example, the last match I shot there were two stages that had the most amount of top 10 match placement in the top 10 for the stage. The 900yd stage and the 100yd paper stage. The rest of the stages had some random amount of mid pack shooters mixed into the top 10 for the stage.
Dope is obvious. If you don’t have good dope, you can’t begin to expect to do well in a match.
Fundamentals goes hand in hand with dope. As you cannot record good data if your shots are not consistent. So, you MUST have good fundamentals to expect good data.
Moving to positional shooting off props. You absolutely MUST be able to build stable positions to do well in prs style matches. Shooting these at 100yds removes wind from the equation. So there is zero reason other than the shooter or the rifle if you are not able to perform @ 100yds.
The MOST OVERRATED skill for a *novice to intermediate* shooter is the ability to read wind. You could read wind down to 1mph and if you don’t have proper fundamentals/dope/position, you’ll never be consistent.
If you missed the first shot on every stage in a match, but you were able to see your shot, make a proper correction, and hit the rest of the shots......you’d be an upper pack shooter. In a local match, that would only be 7-10 dropped shots (7-10 stages) on average. That’s all with ZERO wind reading ability. Obviously some matches with switchy winds would skew the results. I’m speaking generally.
So, for the novice to intermediate shooters, here is my suggestion for training/practice:
1: absolutely hammer the fundamentals until you’re sick of it (get proper instruction and take classes)
2: have absolute rock solid dope
3: practice @ 100yds only. 1” and 2” dot drills. Prone and positional off props. You can get away with just a prs barricade if need be.
Do not stress about needing 4-800yds to practice. I’ll quote Erik Cortina here......if you can’t shoot tiny groups at 100, what makes you think you can do it at 1000?