One part of the shooting sports I love so much is the camaraderie between competitors. My first three gun match I went to, people were sharing gear with each other or giving tips on stage planning and whatnot. I wish someone had shared the tip with me that 3" 00 Buck is not allowed in a normal course of fire. That was a good time, except I short shucked the gun and caused a malfunction. I also forgot to do a mandatory rifle mag reload, ran out of rounds in the middle of the stage, and failed to engage a couple pistol targets. It was a great time, but when the MD walked up and told me no bigger than #6 shot was allowed, I felt a little disappointed that I hadn't read the rules first. Anyway....
I would love to see the shooting sports take off even more than it has in the last few years so the pros can really be recognized for the time, effort, and money they put into the game, but until then, the small community of competitors we have makes it common to see GM-level shooters giving tips and pointers to new people, which is amazing. I'm sure the pros do it too, but I've never shot with a "big name" pro shooter so I don't know how approachable those folks are. They're probably all big douchebags who are full of themselves and have ridiculous demands at each match they show up at, like only green M&Ms in the candy dish and every round in the crystal ammo case has to have the headstamp facing alternating directions.