runawaygun762
Well-Known Fanatic
I have already brought up a couple of these points previously, but now I'm hoping for some help in resolving them.
Have any of you shooters, when starting out, ever used a checklist to help you in stage planning? I'm contemplating trying it, but I don't know if it would just make things more confusing. The thought came as a result of a local USPSA match where many of us were having a hell of a time trying to figure out the fastest way to shoot a stage, and a kid, I think he was eight or nine, asked his dad if he was allowed to move utside the shooting area to another target array. I immediately realized that was perfectly legal, as long as no rounds were fired until getting back in the shooting area. I'm also the guy who finishes a stage and looks around to make sure I shot at everything.
Looking at it from the perspective of a dumbass, it seems like having a personal checklist for stage planning would help, with things such as where reloads need to take place, where I can game the stage without violating a rule, which targets to put two shots on and which ones to go for one A (in the case of a three gun stage), things like that. I doubt many have tried doing something like this, but if you have, I'd love to get some feedback on how it worked out. My idea is to have a checklist that over time becomes second nature and turns into my technique for breaking down a stage in my head.
Have any of you shooters, when starting out, ever used a checklist to help you in stage planning? I'm contemplating trying it, but I don't know if it would just make things more confusing. The thought came as a result of a local USPSA match where many of us were having a hell of a time trying to figure out the fastest way to shoot a stage, and a kid, I think he was eight or nine, asked his dad if he was allowed to move utside the shooting area to another target array. I immediately realized that was perfectly legal, as long as no rounds were fired until getting back in the shooting area. I'm also the guy who finishes a stage and looks around to make sure I shot at everything.
Looking at it from the perspective of a dumbass, it seems like having a personal checklist for stage planning would help, with things such as where reloads need to take place, where I can game the stage without violating a rule, which targets to put two shots on and which ones to go for one A (in the case of a three gun stage), things like that. I doubt many have tried doing something like this, but if you have, I'd love to get some feedback on how it worked out. My idea is to have a checklist that over time becomes second nature and turns into my technique for breaking down a stage in my head.