Patrick McNamara spent twenty-two years in the United States Army in several special operations units. McNamara has trained tactical applications of shooting to people of all levels of marksmanship. Over the years, he developed a training methodology that is combat relevant and provides courses covering individual and collective standards.
While serving as his unit’s Marksmanship NCO, McNamara developed his own marksmanship club with NRA, CMP, and USPSA affiliations. Mac ran monthly IPSC matches and ran semi annual military marksmanship championships to encourage marksmanship fundamentals and competitiveness. Here’s his take on competition shooting and its value to real world shooting.
“Though there is no instant solution to shooting well, I truly believe that the illusive shortcut is in competition. How does one compartmentalize the pressures of a gunfight? Well, you won’t learn to do it during the gunfight. Competition forces pressure on the shooter and it is mostly self-induced. We experience anxiety because of self defeating beliefs. The more one trains under pressure, the more he learns to compartmentalize those pressures.
There are many who believe that competing in the likes of an IPSC match has no tactical relevancy, and it is all just a game.
OK, it’s a game where you are shooting your gun at targets, under time, and with people watching you. You must handle your weapon properly, and follow all rules or be DQed (disqualified). You must discriminate between “shoot” and “no-shoot” targets. You have got to move and make use of cover. You will have to fire from awkward positions. You must find a solution to an ambiguous situation within your skill level.”
Patrick McNamara
SGM, US Army (Ret)
Mr. Kelly D Venden
Jul 02, 2013 @ 08:32:11
Everyone enjoys poking holes in targets….zombies, osama, and others….the true test of one’s capabilities is when tested under stress. Normally one cannot shoot at others to raise the level of stress to that of a deadly force encounter, so the IPSC & IDPA realms are the next best thing. The shooter has the clock, other competitors, and the toughest critic (him or her self) to satisfy with not only a clean run, but fundamentally correct and accurate hits to boot. Anyone that says competition is not worthy of their time is one whom will never reach their true capacity; and will forever live with a false sense of confidence. Get out there, train hard, train correctly, and put your skills to the test BEFORE you are faced with an adversary who won’t just count off for C or D zone hits….
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John M. Buol Jr.
Jul 02, 2013 @ 15:56:34
Glad I’m not alone in thinking this way. Thanks!
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