deleted
I suggest you make ready then look up, clear your mind of all thoughts, and instead focus on what your first move to a target will be.
Running your stage plan in your head that close to the start signal easily puts you behind the curve when the timer sounds, as your mind will mostly likely be on something other than making that move to engage the first target
The time to rehearse the stage plan should end when you step up to the box.
Do it enough, and it’ll become a habit if you don’t actively fight it. I don’t think every hour of competition requires three hours of SD training to make sure you don’t get kilt in da streetz, but I guarantee you can build that in as something that you unintentionally do.
If you honestly think that you can completely separate your gaming techniques from SD tactics, you’re either one hell of a problem solver or you’re a bit ignorant.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Common sense? Humans are habit forming creatures. You’re saying that if you do something four to six times in a day, and you repeat that once or twice a month for several months without anything to oppose it, it won’t become a habit?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
"Action shooting sports are a tremendous benefit to any shooter. They were actively encouraged and supported when I was at JSOC for that very reason. We weren't worried about someone coming back with bad habits. The only habits they were going to come back with were good shooting habits. ". - Mike Pannone
"Though there is no instant solution to shooting well, I truly believe that the illusive shortcut is in competition" -Pat Macnamera
https://youtu.be/N_BwbEz8CU4
Last edited by HopetonBrown; 03-15-2020 at 08:28 PM.
I believe that Frank Proctor calls your position "weak sauce"
ETA just in case you would need his CV:
https://www.frankproctorshooting.com...ctor-shooting/About Frank Proctor Shooting
I served over 20 years in the military and the last 16 of those in the US Army Special Forces. In 2004 I attended SFAUC- Special Forces Advanced Urban Combat Course. I knew then that being a better shooter would be a life long passion. In between deployments and other duties at Group I was and assistant instructor for Combat Marksmanship, CQB, Breaching and the Sniper program. I later became the NCOIC for the Sniper program and Primary instructor for Combat Marksmanship. During that time I had the privilege to serve with and learn from some great dudes.
In May 2007 I started competitive shooting and found out what I didn’t know about shooting! I started shooting a match almost every weekend and when I failed at something I would work on it during the week so I could see an improvement the next weekend.