Who are these "most" sport shooters? Most sport shooters that you know? Most sport shooters in USPSA? Most sport shooters in IDPA? Your statement is so broad as to be completely meaningless, because I could just as easily say "most sport shooters are interested in self defense" without providing any other relevant data sets.
Second: which timer oriented defensive drills? Bill Drills? FAST? Or are you just making broad statements with no backing in order to reinforce your own narrow view of the firearms community?
If you're going to make sweeping statements with no credible backing, expect them to be challenged exactly as such. Although it might have been easier for me to just say "citation needed."
Sport shooting is exactly what it's titled.
"Sport".
About the only thing that ties to the practical implication of the various disciplines is the fundamental aspects of the shooting act itself. Tactics, equipment, etc. isn't remotely related. A lot of people can't figure that out.
WHO? Who are these people who insist that competition shooting is teaching tactics? Because I've been deeply involved in competition shooting for 13 years now, and I don't know any of these people that keep getting referenced.
No one is saying this. What lots of people, including some of the most switched on dudes in the world, are saying is that competition gives you the only opportunity to properly stress test your marksmanship skills outside of well structured force on force training.
You need to come to "hickville" where I'm at and shoot someIDPAtraining!
I hear you and actually agree, most of those shooting at high level in the games are educated in reality. I kind of said that too in a manner of speaking...."is the fundamental aspects of the shooting act itself". I was agreeing with your post about 3 Gun "being divorced from reality". And quite honestly all gun games are. I've went to the line many times with a full tube, 22 rounds on my chest, 6 more on my wrist, plus another in a match saver and shot almost all of them. I hold no illusion anything remotely close to that will happen if I ever deploy my scattergun in a real fight. I'll have 7 in my Browning or 9 in my 590 and likely be wearing nothing but my underwear.
Lets not even bring up the 18+ targets in the average COF. Ooops...
For the OP's hardware question, MesaTactical does have a 4-round right side carrier on the market:
https://www.mesatactical.com/product...ight-side.html
Having enough ammo with a shotgun is going to be a compromise compared to what some handguns and rifles are capable of providing ammo-wise.
Depending on one's threat-scenario, how much ammo is something you'll just have to decide and plan.
I'm guessing with the Aridus sidesaddle, you already have an additional 6 rounds to, what may be, 4 rounds already in the mag tube. If you weren't using a short-barrel-shotgun, an 18.5" barrel shotgun might provide up to 6 or 7 rounds in the mag tube, but with the potential decreased mobility of 4" more of barrel length; another compromise.
Just for info, I pictured some of what I have or had-for-work.
One photo merely shows a Mossberg 14" 590A1 which we used for work. It had 4 buckshot rounds in the tube; and 4 slugs in the Speedfeed-brand stock; which are 2 rounds on the left-side-rear and another 2 rounds on the right-side-rear (I see the photo is too dark to even see the shell holder stock's details).
My personal gun shown, is a Mossberg 590A1 18.5", with 4 buckshot rounds (downloaded one) in the tube; 4 slug rounds on the receiver sidesaddle, and (not seen in the photo) another 5 slug rounds on a stock-mounted sidesaddle screwed into the stock.
https://www.brownells.com/shooting-a...?sku=100005355
This gives me 13 rounds (14 if I loaded the mag tube to full capacity) on the gun itself when I grab just this shotgun. If 13 isn't enough, I suppose I'm "SOL"; transitioning to handgun (should I have one); going to knife (if I have one).
There are other ammo-carrier products on the market which can do the same thing with Velcro-hook-&-loop attachments or elastic. I just didn't use those this time around.
The training to top off &/or reload has already been discussed. I believe it is a "perishable skill" and needs to be practiced. Our department only qualified 2x/year and one can tell who needed more practice. Each person is different with some needing more practice than others. Also, some LEOs handled the shotgun daily in loading and reloading; while others only handled the shotgun those two times per year at qualification time.
Last edited by L-2; 10-03-2019 at 05:34 PM.