Saturday, July 25, 2009

A poor performance

Finally shot a match today, for the first time since I shot the IDPA Classifier. And I didn't do very well, which was dismaying, but not wholly unexpected. I finished 6th out of 12, which to me isn't as good as it might seem.

That basically put me last in the group of experienced shooters. Many of the other six were either dealing with a handicap, such as the older man that had a severely broken ankle earlier in his life that hindered his movement and made it difficult or impossible for him to kneel. There was a young lady that had only been shooting for a couple of years. I should finish in front of that group, and should have finished further up than I did...but I didn't.

I found that, once again, mashing the trigger and trying to go faster don't work well together. I dropped some points that I shouldn't have. I caught myself looking at the target instead of the sights a couple times. I missed a relatively easy head shot on the second of three targets, and pretty much center punched the other two. I dropped one point on the hardest stage and felt like I should have gotten that one, too. That's where the points were missing, but it was all my fault. The one I have a hard time living with was the head shot I missed. 5 down on an easy target. I hit the target, but managed to put it outside the perforations. Yeah, it's a talent.

I mentioned expecting a less than stellar performance, and to a degree I did expect it. I was shooting a new Glock 17 with new sights. I'm not dead certain the sights are adjusted to where they need to be, but they worked good on the pepper popper that I hammered with about five rounds. The trigger in that gun is quite a bit different than my MnP, which I shot my Classifier with. It was the new gun and I wanted to run it, so I did, expecting that I might not shoot as good as I might have.

I also ran a new Safariland ALS that was tighter than my MnP ALS is. I didn't practice much with it, and had to borrow my mag pouches, too, as my Blade Tech double mag pouch has come up missing. All that new gear meant that I was going to struggle a little, and in the end, I struggled about as much as I expected to. If there had been mag changes in this match, I would have made up a lot of ground, as some of the malfunctions I saw were not handled expertly. Oddly enough, the ones I saw were with 1911's, with at least one of them being a Kimber. That doesn't mean that Tactical Tupperware shooters wouldn't have had trouble. Its a skill that has to be practiced.

It all comes down to this: you will not rise to the occasion. You will revert to the level of your training.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I went to the range the other day. The first 10 rounds I was shooting low and to the left. Pissed me the hell off! I have no idea what's going on with that. Maybe I am anticipating the recoil, who knows? All I know is it pissed me off.

Haji said...

Low and left means you're mashing the trigger. There's a chart somewhere that shows what the correction is for all the areas of bullet impact. I'll see if I can find it somewhere.

Anonymous said...

Really?

It could be something that simple? Please do see if you can find that somewhere. I would really appreciate it.

Haji said...

Actually, it's usually something that simple.

Anonymous said...

Well, at the time I was wondering, "Damn, do I need effing glasses? What the hell?"

Haji said...

been there, done that, have a whole big stack of the t-shirts.

Anonymous said...

I'll tell ya, it was so frustrating that I was going to make damn sure I hit center of mass by THROWING the damn gun at it!