LuckyDucky
Well-Known Fanatic
*Please note, this thread is not about stupid IDPA rules unrelated to scoring.
Any idea why USPSA scores (hit factors) are inversely related to time?
This puts a huge emphasis on having a lower time at the expense of accuracy.
Other competition styles such as IDPA, steel challenge, and GSSF all have direct relations between score and time. So shooting/moving faster does not exponentially increase score.
For example, Shooter A, a USPSA major shooter, might shoot a stage in 5 seconds with 1 no shoot and 1A, 2Cs, and 1D (5 points) for a hit factor of 2. Using IDPA scoring, Shooter A would have 7.5 penalty seconds giving a total time of 12.5 seconds.
But Shooter B, another major shooter, might shoot the same stage in 10 seconds with 2As and 2Cs (18 points) for a hit factor of 1.8. But using IDPA scoring, Shooter B has only 1 penalty second for a score of 11 seconds.
So Shooter B shot slower, but more accurate, and loses in USPSA but wins in IDPA.
Hopefully someone will see what I'm getting at...
But to sum it up, in USPSA, Time > Accuracy because time is inversely related to final score and this places a much larger emphasis on speed than accuracy.
My question is why? Why score this way?
Any idea why USPSA scores (hit factors) are inversely related to time?
This puts a huge emphasis on having a lower time at the expense of accuracy.
Other competition styles such as IDPA, steel challenge, and GSSF all have direct relations between score and time. So shooting/moving faster does not exponentially increase score.
For example, Shooter A, a USPSA major shooter, might shoot a stage in 5 seconds with 1 no shoot and 1A, 2Cs, and 1D (5 points) for a hit factor of 2. Using IDPA scoring, Shooter A would have 7.5 penalty seconds giving a total time of 12.5 seconds.
But Shooter B, another major shooter, might shoot the same stage in 10 seconds with 2As and 2Cs (18 points) for a hit factor of 1.8. But using IDPA scoring, Shooter B has only 1 penalty second for a score of 11 seconds.
So Shooter B shot slower, but more accurate, and loses in USPSA but wins in IDPA.
Hopefully someone will see what I'm getting at...
But to sum it up, in USPSA, Time > Accuracy because time is inversely related to final score and this places a much larger emphasis on speed than accuracy.
My question is why? Why score this way?