In preview, I would like to say that shooting excellent scores
with a pistol requires no other elements than those described in
the following sentence. ALIGN THE SIGHTS PROPERLY ON THAT
PART OF THE TARGET REQUIRED FOR YOUR GROUP TO CENTER IN THE BLACK
AND CAUSE THE HAMMER TO FALL WITHOUT DISTURBING THAT ALIGNMENT.
All elements of pistol shooting such as position, grip, sight
alignment, breath control, trigger control, physical condition,
and psychology of shooting, when perfected, simply enable the
shooter to perform the action described in the above key
sentence.
Body Position or Stance
We are all constructed differently and have different natural
positions. To find your natural position, face away from the
target 45 degrees. Look at the target by turning your head and
eyes only and raise the pistol to the eye, target, line. Close
your eyes, raise your pistol and arm several feet and allow it to
fall relaxed, and naturally to the horizontal. If it falls right
down the center of the target, you have your natural position. If
it falls to one side, shuffle on your feet, keeping the body axis
from the feet to the shoulder the same, until the pistol is
aligned on the target again. Several tries such as this one will
readily show you how far to face away from the target. This test
need only be made during one shooting session. At all following
sessions start out with the position that you have decided is
natural for you and stay with it. The feet should be spread apart
about the width of your shoulders or a little more. I have
noticed that I spread my feet farther apart than when I first
began shooting. Others have told me that they do the same.
However, if you spread your feet unnaturally at first, you will
have to exert undue muscular effort to maintain balance. The
object is to be well balanced and comfortable.
The legs should be straight, but not stiff. Allow the knee joints
to fall into a locked position, but still be relaxed. The thigh
muscles should be relaxed. If you are tense anywhere, it is a
sign of strain and will show up in your trigger control. The hips
should be level and in an easy, natural position. Let your
abdomen relax. We have a lot of fun admiring each other's
"pots" during pistol matches, but no one ever attempts
to hold it in. Allow the shoulders to hang naturally and relaxed.
I prefer to place my free hand in my side pocket. Some shooters,
especially those with long arms, can perform best by just letting
their free arms and hand hang naturally at the side. The object
is to entirely forget about it. It must be relaxed and forgotten.
An instructor can easily spat a student who is not relaxed by the
attitude of the free arm. The head and neck should be in an easy
natural position. The shooter must look at the target by turning
his head and eyes slightly without moving from the neck down. The
simplest way to do this is to face your entire body away from the
target at the angle you have selected and then turn your head and
eyes only to the target before raising your pistol to the firing
position. While looking at the target from this natural position,
raise your pistol until you can align the sights on the target.
The important thing is to make your pistol arm fit the body
position instead of ruining a good body position by craning the
neck and shoulders trying to get behind the pistol. The body
position must be selected first, then use the pistol arm only to
bring the sights in line with the eye and target.
The pistol arm should be extended directly toward the target. The
wrist is locked without strain, (this requires practice), the
elbow is locked also but with no sense of strain or tenseness.
The gull and arm supported by the muscles on top of the shoulder,
(the trapezius group). Try holding a ten or fifteen pound weight
out in the firing position and feel the top of your shoulder
where the arm joins and you will find the small hard muscles that
support your gun arm. You should feel that the pistol is hanging
from above, and not that you are pushing it up from below.
Breath Control
The object of breath control is to enable the shooter to hold his
breath with a comfortable feeling long enough to fire one shot
slow fire; 5 shots in 20 seconds timed fire; and 5 shots in 10
seconds rapid fire. I recommend taking several deep relaxing
breaths immediately prior to extending the pistol, and as you
extend it, take another breath and exhale until your lungs feel
normal. Hold until you fire the required shots. If you have too
much air in the lungs, you will feel the pressure and it will
interfere with your ability to hold. If you completely empty the
lungs your arm will begin to shake in about 5 seconds. You are
likely to have more trouble in the timed fire stage than the
others. In order to be comfortable for 20 seconds, you must time
your breathing just right and prepare for the string beforehand
by taking several deep breaths. Take a deeper than normal breath
at the command "Ready on the right"; take another at
"Ready on the left"; at the command "Ready on the
Firing Line" extend your pistol and take another breath and
exhale to the point of comfort just as the targets turn.
Physical Conditioning
Many shooters discount the element of proper physical
conditioning. They think that so little effort is required to
extend a two pound pistol and fire it that they need no exercise.
I have spent many days at hard labor such as cross-tie loading,
woodcutting, ditch-digging, football, etc., but I have never felt
as much fatigue from those labors as I have from a full day at
match shooting. I realize that some of my fatigue is due to a
certain amount of nervous tension, however, I have learned that
when I am in top condition, I feel good even after two or three
days of match shooting. The real payoff for good condition lies
in the score. I know several shooters who have added fifty points
or more to their Grand Aggregates by conditioning themselves with
systematic weight lifting pro- grams prior to the matches. I
recommend a mild weight-lifting program and some road work to put
the shooter in a good general condition, then some special
exercises for the shooting arm. These special exercises consist
of dry firing with a weight weighing several times more than the
pistol. A quart milk bottle full of water, or a six pound
dumb-bell are some of the things I have used. Extend the weight
just as you would a pistol and line it up on an object and try to
hold it steady until your arm starts throbbing. Rest for a few
minutes and repeat the exercise. 10 minutes of this each day that
you do not shoot on the range will enable you to hold steadier
and longer than before.
Trigger Control
I do not like to use the word "squeeze" in connection
with trigger control. When we think of the action of squeezing,
we usually close all four fingers and thumb together at the same
time. This is definitely not proper trigger control. The pressure
put on the trigger must come from the trigger finger only The
gripping fingers and base of thumb do not move. Review the
chapter on grip. Get the proper grip on your pistol and keep the
pressure constant, align the sights on the target properly, then
with the trigger finger only, exert a steady, constantly
increasing pressure, straight to the rear, until the hammer
falls. There is a slightly different method of trigger control
that I recommend for master shooters only and even then with
extreme caution. The difference is that while the sight picture
is not perfect, the trigger pressure is maintained, but not
increased. When the picture becomes good again, the pressure is
continued. This method when used correctly, insures that all
shots go off with a perfect sight picture. The danger in this
method is the tendency to flinch. I have been successful in the
timed and slow fire stages, but I revert to the constantly
increased pressure method in rapid fire. I just don't have time
to interrupt my pressure in the rapid fire stage.
There is one very important element common to both trigger
control methods: the shooter does not pick out a definite moment
to fire the gun. He knows by the amount of pressure on the
trigger about when the hammer will fall, but not the exact
instant. If he does pick out one exact instant to make the hammer
fall, he will invariably flinch.
Flinching
Flinching is the convulsive movement made just as the hammer
falls that causes shots to miss the target, or strike anywhere
from the 5 ring to the 8 ring. All shooters suffer from this
malady at one time or another. When Joe Benner gets an eight he
has flinched because he would never put pressure on his trigger
with his sights aligned in the eight ring, (windy shooting
excepted). Your progress in the competitive field of target
shooting depends largely on your ability to overcome flinching. I
include all such movements as "Bucking,"
"Jerking" in the general term "Flinching."
Here is exactly what happens: If you know the exact moment your
pistol is going to fire, your subconscious mind orders you to
brace your body against the recoil, and you do so, resulting in a
flinch. The remedy is to never know the exact instant the hammer
will fall. Even then your subconscious mind will make brace, but
the reaction time between the explosion and your bracing will
allow the bullet to leave the barrel without being misdirected by
your flinch.
Psychology of Shooting
This is a serious problem to many shooters and to some degree a
problem to all shooters. I'm referring to the building up of
pressure inside the shooter that makes him shoot like a novice
when he is capable of shooting 2600. It is sometimes called
"Buck Fever" or "Monkey on my Back." It
prevents the shooter from shooting in matches, the scores that he
shoots in practice. The best cure for this feeling is self
confidence. If you shoot 870 with your .22 in practice, walk up
on the line with the feeling that you can shoot 870 and will. 870
probably won't put you in the first 5 places, but it is your
normal score and you can always shoot it. Sometimes you get hot
and shoot 880. Don't keep such an accurate count of your scores
that you end up in the National Match Course knowing that if you
shoot 295, you will set a new record. Just shoot your matches as
they come, record your score, and forget about them. Absolutely
don't count your competitor's score to the point that you know
exactly how much you need to beat them. Sometimes a shooter
shoots 5 or 6 consecutive tens in the slow fire string. It is
awful hard to stay with it. My advice is to spot your shots until
you are sure that your sights are set right and then finish your
string without spotting any more.
The match shooter has a complicated problem. He wants to win and
when he sees a chance to win because of some good strings, his
breath quickens, and his heart beats so fast that he can feel it
in his trigger finger. As a result he usually blows a five shot
string and then for the rest of the match shoots normally. If we
could just go to a match and be satisfied with our practice
score; refrain from counting up our aggregates as we go; refuse
to speculate on how much it will take to win; refrain from
comparing competitor's scores, we would probably shoot much
better. Here again experience strengthens our ability. The match
shooter who has been to match after match and been disappointed
time after time soon finds that it just doesn't seem so important
to win. Then he begins to shoot his best scores in matches.
Suggestions to the Beginner
We will begin with equipment. I will not discuss equipment any
further than to say that you must have complete confidence in
your pistols and your ammunition. If you doubt either, you will
blame equipment for your errors, and not correct them. Dry firing
will develop and improve every element of shooting except
recovery from recoil. It develops that machine-like precision in
the timings of your timed and rapid fire stages. I suggest a
fifteen minute session of dry-firing every day that you do not
shoot on the range. Simulate your range conditions as much as
possible.
When you are troubled with flinching, use the roulette system,
until you conquer the fault. By the roulette system I mean that
you load all cylinders and spin the cylinder between each shot.
This insures that you will soon be putting pressure on the
trigger without knowing whether or not a live one is under the
hammer. When the hammer falls and snaps, you will be able to see
your flinch and soon eliminate it.
You must do more than just shoot during your practice sessions.
Call your shots slow fire and analyze your weaknesses. No amount
of shooting will improve your score unless some thought and
planning go along with the shooting. I shoot a complete
aggregate, (900), with one caliber during each practice session.
If you possibly can, practice on the range 3 times a week and dry
fire at home all other days. Don't try to shoot too much during
one practice session. One 900 aggregate is just about enough,
especially with the .45. Keep an accurate record of your
progress. If you fail to write down your scores, you will soon
remember only the good ones. Always time yourself by some method
or have someone time you during practice sessions. It is second
nature to shoot your rapid in 12 seconds if you are not timed.
Slow Fire
Remember that you do not have to shoot before bringing your gun
arm down to rest. When a shooter feels any fatigue or feels that
he is running short of breath, by all means he should lower his
arm, breathe deeply and try again, after relaxing. Some excellent
slow fire shooters try two or three times before getting a shot
off. Don't insist on having the perfect sight picture before
applying pressure to the trigger. You can shoot groups only
within pour ability to hold. If you can hold within the ten ring,
then should go there, but if you are like most of us, even after
years of shooting; you are satisfied to hold within the nine ring
and get your tens from the law of averages, and cuss your
eight's.
Timed Fire
Prepare your lungs by breathing deeply prior to firing and
holding it just as you align your sights. Make rhythm, (interval
between shots), the prime object. Never vary your rhythm. Adjust
your recovery so that you have your sight picture in time for the
next shot to go, but do not wait for perfect sight picture. If
you maintain your rhythm and fail to get perfect sight picture,
you'll get nines. If you make the gun fire just as the sight
picture is perfect, you will get misses.
Rapid Fire
Rhythm is of prime importance. Rhythm is important because you
develop rhythm only by putting a uniform pressure on the trigger
after each recovery. Your can improve you rapid fire by learning
to fire the first shot within one second after the target turns
to you.
Conclusion
The theory of shooting is simple: You create a machine rest with
your stance, grip and breath control. Then with the gun in the
machine rest, you apply pressure directly to the rear until the
hammer falls. In practice we sometimes find our machine rest
wobbly because it has a brain and can count scores and anticipate
wins. Through experience and practice you must make the brain
machine-like also.