Fake news on him getting the silver because I don’t even see him drinking black rifle coffee, and I happen to know (through a friend (Harvey Weinstein)) that he didn’t even attend the Sonoran Desert Institute. And where’s his LPVO on that rig? Does he seriously not run one? Who’s his VPN sponsor??? And I don’t even see any gun bunnies at his booth! NGMI!
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
made me spit my drink out dude 🤣🤣
@darthsquidious2153 ай бұрын
And where was his plate carrier? Can he ever do a 4 minute mile? He needs force multipliers to up his stopping power
@Schrodingers_kid3 ай бұрын
And he doesn't look like he's having chicken with his steroids! Wait, he doesn't even look like someone taking steroids!
@sclogse13 ай бұрын
Why, you gadfly, you...
@BullseyePistol3 ай бұрын
This burn is brought to you by Simplisafe
@pendantblade63613 ай бұрын
He only won silver because the Turkish govt didn't want to out him as their best assassin.
@Znebby3 ай бұрын
So funny 😂😂😂
@mugwithnocoffee25723 ай бұрын
Gold is too suspicious
@Muhammad.9113 ай бұрын
Somewhat agree coz his final shot, it looks like he purposely wait for the opponent to shoot first and he purposely didn’t shoot a 10
@1rjona3 ай бұрын
Didn't John Wick got killed when he went to Paris ?
@R3TR0J4N3 ай бұрын
Mission accomplished agen-
@PaleoBushman3 ай бұрын
Brother, I'm an old Gen x dude who's been on three deployments to Afghanistan. Twice I served in the infantry, and once as a combat engineer while in country. I've done all sorts of gun work In my life, and I honestly believe there is not a better channel on KZbin than yours. You are very down to earth and I've never heard you say anything that wasn't right on point. That's more than I can say for a lot of the so-called big gun-tubers that's for sure. Thank you for speaking with sound logic and reasoning on this topic. I want to be careful and not draw too many comparisons here of course. However, I must say that the thoroughness of your delivery reminds me a lot of the great Paul Harrell. . Keep up the great work! Blessings...
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
semper fi
@bastientudury6703 ай бұрын
@@JaredAF I was thinking the very same thing, your remind a lot of Paul Harrell in the way you present things : no need for over the top staging, no need to show off your 5000$ setup, no eternal debate over barrel lenght or run a suppressor or not for when the Humongous Legion is going to rob your home etc. Straight to the point, down to Earth, everything you need to know about handgun shooting sum up in 15 minutes, some dry humor, and you're good to go. Keep the good work, and cheers from France, where I have to work on my terrible groups with my CZ-75 x)
@esteva033 ай бұрын
Add on top of that he talks with the confidence of a 90 year old dude who likes the smell of napalm in the morning. 🙌😄
@TheOnlyOnwuma3 ай бұрын
Great analogy comparing the trigger pull to a golf stroke. That's spot on.
@WheelgunsOnWheels3 ай бұрын
Yeah that was absolutely perfect. This guy knows his stuff and more!
@brianpdaniels3 ай бұрын
I've been shooting bullseye pistol for 20 years, ive never hear a better synopsis of the basics of pistol shooting. Good job.
@echko_93 ай бұрын
The dry firing at Janice whenever she's on screen is too relatable...
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@fordhouse8b3 ай бұрын
The only surprising part is that it was DRY firing.
@k-9thecat7653 ай бұрын
Wow,.... In Kyu-do, the Japanese art of archery, the target isn't even considered ... It's the presence of mind & follow-through that matters .. Hitting the target in the correct spot is an after-thought... What is trained is everything that happens before the arrow is launched .. Total clarity of mind, or no-mind, Mushin... 😁😁😁
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
Exactly the same here. All you are focused on are the sights and trigger. sights. trigger. sights. trigger.
@pest_41093 ай бұрын
First time on this channel, not a gun guy, found it all super interesting and well explained with no ego. Well done.
@scottperry40923 ай бұрын
Love it. I shot competitively. My instructor always said “breath, sights, press”. Never squeeze in competitive shooting, squeeze implies tight grip. anschütz 4 life! Thanks again for a great vid.
@Ralinos3 ай бұрын
❤️ the people who think there's a difference are only worried about recoil! But, recoil comes after the round has left the barrel. Recoil matters for accuracy on following shots. Recoil only affects first shots through experience & anticipation/pre-compensation.
@burgundypoint3 ай бұрын
Recoil has a distinct mental/psychological impact on the shooter that must be dominated through a mental focus process. It adds another level of challenge
@ShootingAir3 ай бұрын
Retired coach (pistol and rifle) ~ 99% agree, only nit is breathing... there's a natural respiratory pause at full exhale, so that's usually the most ideal time to break a shot. Too many people have no idea the difference between Training and Practicing. Training is working on core fundamentals, and this is where you find improvement. The only live fire Training I can think of is working on recoil/target acquisition. 90% of more of Training time is in dry fire mode, it's how you get better. Work on 1 thing at a time, like you said.. trigger brake first, without aiming/sights. Sight alignment without trigger, sight with trigger, etc.... Practice is putting all those training sessions together, you spend the least time here. I love talking trigger control with tactiCool guys, then hand them one of my airguns and watch them YANK the trigger/shot right off the target. Some can keep it on the paper before 10 shots, not many though.
@69Harveyb13 ай бұрын
I used to participate on the airgun shooting forums. There's one other thing you might agree with me on: ♾ (if you know, you know)
@covertops19Z3 ай бұрын
Great posting, @ShootingAir Many Thanks. Me, U.S. Army Distinguished Rifleman and NRA Highpower High Master with the M14NM. "HITS COUNT!"
@another39973 ай бұрын
@@covertops19ZGood for you. Always take every opportunity to try and impress the internet with macho military stories and such like. Unfortunately we didn't see you take any medals in the Olympics this year. Perhaps you were too busy polishing your trophies and glorifying guns to take part? 😂
@covertops19Z3 ай бұрын
@another3997 What a great response, Karen. I'm sure your skill set is worthy of accomplishment 👏 also. Probably master lever on call of duty or world of warships, huh?? 🧐🧐🧐. Yesterday, I saw a great T-shirt at my local county fair, which would probably trigger you also. It read. "I FIND YOUR LACK OF AMMO DISTURBING" Now back to polishing my medals😁😁😁👍
@k-9thecat7653 ай бұрын
Took a tour of the Olympic training center in Colorado long time ago... The shooters have to eat correctly & train cardio... They slow their heart-rate to the point they can shoot between heart-beats... The cafeteria is buffet style with the sneeze-guard loaded with all the nutrition facts of each item...
@Ember343 ай бұрын
The most interesting fact i learned here is that the glass panels are called sneeze-guards
@Surai003 ай бұрын
Does the buffet have level 4 plates?
@dominic66343 ай бұрын
And they got whooped by a guy from turkey who didn't do all that.
@dylanlamarre37683 ай бұрын
The Turk doesn't squeeze between heart beats. His heart is stone cold frozen
@neerajnongmaithem3923 ай бұрын
Oh they have that. Olympic marksmen in many passionate countries are trained at an extremely high standard. The turkish guy is in his 5th Olympics, and even after this much practice this was his first silver in a team event. You should check out jin jong oh of korea, that man won consecutive 3 gold medals in 50m airpistol and 1 gold in 10m. Also holds the world record in 10m and also held the WR in 50m once. One of the greatest Olympic shooter ever, a sport where even once is super rare @@dominic6634
@brianpdaniels3 ай бұрын
I find air pistol more difficult than .22. i figure that it's the dwell time of the pellet in the barrel. All the best pistol shooters I know are serious about shooting air pistol.
@69Harveyb13 ай бұрын
Hence, follow through. And Yes. I'm an airgunner first, firearms shooter second.
@feez3573 ай бұрын
I have been trying to teach this to my grandkids. I just have trouble explaining it like you did. I'm going to make this video their next homework assignment. I'm not competition level but I have been using advice like yours for years. Trouble is, it came from a hundred sources, but you just packaged it SO well !
@fullmetalastro3 ай бұрын
Hey this video legit made me a better shooter. The follow-through idea really works. Practice which part of your finger gives you the best follow-through. For me, its the finger tip, which is not what i was told to do and so always resulted in difficulties. Thanks Jared!!
@johnnyragadoo24143 ай бұрын
Solid gold information. I struggled to hit anything when I first took up pistol shooting, amazingly, nearly 50 years ago. I lucked into some world class coaching. I've never developed competitive speed and I don't have Olympic accuracy - but on a good day I can match your 50 yard group with my Government Model and its iron sights. Here's a weird zen trick. You can more quickly learn to drop the hammer without moving the sights once you experience it a few times. The trick was to find a way to experience stable sights through sear release without knowing how to do it. For me, that worked like this. Lay on your back and dry fire at the ceiling. The weight of the pistol is down the column of your arm with no effort required to hold the gun up. I also had to learn to keep from shifting my mental state once the trigger released. I'm looking at stable sights. That's all. The finger pulls the trigger without any need for me to shift my focus from admiring those stable sights. Truly good advice in this video.
@todglenn27073 ай бұрын
Why does no one mention he won the silver in the team event? And he had a teammate, Sevval Ilayda Tarhan. Probably so casual because it's his 5th Olympics. Love the channel. So much great info.
@petermach86353 ай бұрын
Yup ..... and look at the pictures of them, both looking as relaxed as the other. .......... that's what I think the secret is, being totally relaxed while being totally focused on the job in hand. I put my best targer from every trip to the range in a bulldog clip fixed to the wall inside my front door so I see it everytime I enter or leave the house. At the top of every sheet I write "Do Better", not "Try Harder" because it's not about trying, it's about doing.
@another39973 ай бұрын
No, he looks casual because he's learned exactly how to relax physically and mentally in order to achieve best results. It's a common theme among top sportspeople and exponents of any discipline. Relaxed concentration is often what separates the good ones from the rest of us.
@TheMrgrimm13 ай бұрын
Clearly and logically explained, thank you! Been shooting for the past 4 years now and I'm finally at 8 inch grouping with my carry 9mm iron sights at 25 yards, dry fire has undoubtedly helped the most. Still have a strong flinch and hard blink every other shot 😅
@S3mj0n3 ай бұрын
A lot of gun guys love to show that they live in a bubble and look down on stuff they don't know. Good video.
@audiosurfarchive9 күн бұрын
A lotta rightoid dog whistling, LARPerators and Christc*ckery. I love the big channels, sure, but this is insanely refreshing. Other stuff that's just abject fun is PSR, but that's not trying to be anything it's not as far as training/practice.
@WheelgunsOnWheels3 ай бұрын
He immediately made me think of you. Super chill and surgically accurate.
@spartansfan10263 ай бұрын
Just want to say that, although I've been watching since your videos on the M16A1 and A2, your past few videos on match handgun shooting have really inspired me to focus on my fundamentals over simply shooting interesting guns. I just got a Model 17-3 from Scheels and dusted off my great-uncle's Woodsman Match Target. I'm a decent shot with a handgun, but nowhere near as good as I want to be. I'm going to start doing this right!
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
Me too! Having a goal to work toward in my marksmanship ability has really shaped my direction and got me actually hitting the range consistently rather than looking for the next thing to acquire.
@spartansfan10263 ай бұрын
@@JaredAF Here's to the follow through! Cheers from Iowa.
@BullseyePistol3 ай бұрын
For as good as Americans are at guns we suck at shooting. That needs to change. Love that this video is getting such good engagement. Nice work Jared
@arithmetech3 ай бұрын
Nah, we just shoot different formats. US is well represented in trap & skeet. If they added 3-gun and precision rifle, we'd be well represented there, too.
@BullseyePistol3 ай бұрын
@@arithmetech good point. I meant kind of as a culture. We are very gun focused and not too shooting focused.
@TheGrenadier973 ай бұрын
Different cultures indeed, but it's still weird that US isn't better-represented in any way in something so common like handgun shooting. Something is off.
@matthewmucci91073 ай бұрын
@@BullseyePistolTraditional bullseye and marksman/olympic type shooting sports are not popular in the way they used to be. I think action shooting sports like 3 gun have supplanted them quite a bit. Hell you probably know that based on your name. Many people will do stuff like Appleseed a few times as an excuse to buy a new gun and learn a bit but won't pick up the associated sports. I get it coming from NRA small bore, I earned expert marksman (one match off of distinguished expert) and i enjoyed it quite a bit and it was valuable to learn the fubdementals. But once I hit college and started skeet and trap, a much more active shooting sport with a lot more action going on I was hooked and had no interest in going back to something as slow paced as small bore or bullseye. That's one reason they kind of have the reputation as old guy shooting sports, and with that it kind of carries the stigmas of shooting culture of yesteryear. My observations, though as we now age and slow down, I can see myself getting into bullseye or something similar again in the future lol
@arithmetech3 ай бұрын
@@TheGrenadier97 not so weird, respectfully. I can ring steel at 50yds and I'm nowhere near the best shooter in my group of friends... yet I only very recently learned what the Cyberpunk-looking Olympic eyewear is all about. I don't even know anyone who owns a pistol like these, even though I know guys with Class III licenses with arsenals that'll knock your socks off. Jared's got follows from some very dedicated shooters. Yet here he is explaining basics of Olympic air pistol shooting to us, and he's got thousands of views because we're interested in learning and we know he's got encyclopedic knowledge. You're witnessing the bridging of the cultural gap right here on this video! Way back in the countryside of the USA, where you find guys who handload and shoot all day, this format does not have much adoption. But as knowledge of this style of competition grows in the USA, you're guaranteed to see the Stars & Bars rising in the rankings of 10m air pistol.
@TheBeeFactory3 ай бұрын
He "looks" like he gives zero effs, but he gives many many effs. He's a professional.
@2GuysTalkingPodcastNetwork3 ай бұрын
What a great snapshot to get people in the know and running on the concept of air-powered shooting in the Olympics. Thanks, Jared!
@another39973 ай бұрын
The same principles apply to non air powered shooting disciplines too, and of course the general principles of mental and physical discipline and achieving a relaxed concentration, is common to success in most things.
@thingman1003 ай бұрын
So many gun guys scoff at the fact that the target is at 10 meters until they'd try it themselves
@bowieupland61123 ай бұрын
It's an Air gun... 😂😅
@IntergalacticVoid3 ай бұрын
@@bowieupland6112You should watch the video
@NeilPundick3 ай бұрын
@@bowieupland6112i think that what people are impressed with is the dicipline required for consistency. "LOL ITS AN AIRGUN" the propellant isnt really the focus here. Technique is literally the exact same. Did you even watch the video?
@henryposadas33093 ай бұрын
@@bowieupland6112and your point is ?
@bowieupland61123 ай бұрын
@@henryposadas3309 My point?..... it's an airgun 🤣
@just-some-dude3 ай бұрын
My facial hair definitely helps my accuracy. How dare you. Yusuf is a boss. As are all the other competitors, but a lot of them look goofy and Yusuf *looks* like a boss.
@golfnguns4433 ай бұрын
Started pistol shooting in 4H as a kid, it was bullseye shooting at 50ft indoor range. Lots of older folks who had all the best equipment and were all about accuracy over speed. Really helped me become a good pistol shooter.
@bigshorty48553 ай бұрын
I learned this myself at vacation 7 years old during a wedding in Trabzon, Turkiye. During the wedding all the men went upstairs to the flat roof, and shot in the air. I asked for a gun and asked if I could shoot at a tree where no one was. The fun thing was everyone was so impressed that everyone wanted me to try their gun out as well. I was only 7, but still to this day, by far the greatest wedding ever ❤️.
@pauloalvesdesouza79113 ай бұрын
Excellent video. Down-to-earth, no BS, straightforward. Love it
@beantea55923 ай бұрын
Friggin thank you dude I've been looking for this info and it's ridiculous how hard it is to find on KZbin
@stevephillips87193 ай бұрын
Excellent advice and every single point you raise is what I have used in training others to shoot straight.
@sceinceguy3 ай бұрын
Spot on about the fundamentals and dry firing schedule. What's interesting is that the skills you acquire Olympic Style and Bullseye shooting will translate better into USPSA, IDPA, IPSC, or 3 gun than the opposite.
@maximilianmustermann57633 ай бұрын
Top-Level USPSA or IPSC shooters do *a lot* of basics training, including precision shooting, but also dry-fire and just basic movements. If you're not willing to do that "boring" stuff, you'll always just be running around dumping bullets into targets and then wondering why you're placed 50 out of a hundred and how the winner of the match was able to run every stage at half your time with more solid hits.
@peterloftus62593 ай бұрын
Great video! Trigger control and sight alignment is absolutely king
@richardpetervonrahden63933 ай бұрын
Excellent summary of the TRUE fundamentals of pistol shooting.
@tidypog32723 ай бұрын
I've been a gun guy for years but i can't watch gun KZbin at all anymore. This is such fresh air. Thank you
@NicholasPatton-lu6xy3 ай бұрын
Thanks for talking about follow through. Thinking of the actions as such has helped me focus. Also continuing to remember to breathe.
@Fragger-13 ай бұрын
Excellent video, and really nails the problem on it's head. Everyone always wants to teach people about tactics, gear, and stance, but the fundamentals are what most shooters are inexperienced with.
@orion10x3 ай бұрын
A great book on 50/10m and bullseye is “Competitive Shooting” by Yuryev
@noybnoyb17183 ай бұрын
Great video, thank you for putting it together. I will be doing this a LOT more often.
@oteliogarcia15623 ай бұрын
also, it's not like he wasn't wearing ear protection as they say on soc-med and television. he was wearing plugs.
@ferrkins3 ай бұрын
Not for protection, these are air pistols.. more for focus
@maximilianmustermann57633 ай бұрын
@@ferrkins Well, air pistols inside a room are annoyingly loud, especially when there's twenty other people next to you shooting as well. It's not like it hurts your ears, but it feels so loud that I'd rather wear plugs.
@Exoticstepin73 ай бұрын
Great video to keep the fundamentals and shooting all together
@alaingarcia47563 ай бұрын
That Turkish guy is more deadly with his BB gun than all these KZbin "navy seals"
@razgriz12583 ай бұрын
You made two identical comments
@TheMatm123453 ай бұрын
I didn't know i was getting a philosophy lesson as well! Thanks for pointing out gunblue. Those old guys know a lot of stuff we dont.
@revjeromebates3 ай бұрын
Great video as always mate. Cheers
@RosterNumber473 ай бұрын
Incredibly articulate and concise explanation -- thank you for making this video. Very well done! (subscribed)
@colewarweg85943 ай бұрын
Great video man, just because you’re young doesn’t mean you don’t know what you’re talking about. You’ve learned what you’ve explained here in this video by experience, and it shows Trigger control is of the utmost importance when shooting a pistol
@brorjordas19792 ай бұрын
Dunno. Heard of follow-thru several times in airgun related channels. But always good to remind people of it. Damn good video! Thank you!
@GMan_the_man3 ай бұрын
I think all of the points are checked off beautifully. Bravo! ❤
@steve57723 ай бұрын
Really well explained, thanks for this, ill be taking a lot of this into my coaching.
@ilovecake75053 ай бұрын
I love how people are hating when they know nothing themselves, also thank you for the advice in your short it really helped me and so did this video. I myself have never shot a gun i only have replicas and am interested in guns, ballistics and trying to be the most accurate i can with my airsoft replicas, just wanted to show you my appreciation for your content. Good day
@podfuk3 ай бұрын
I only saw a praise on this guy, especially from gun guys, I have no idea what hate you both talking about
@SprSonik133 ай бұрын
this video hit my feed as I’m sitting here drinking my morning coffee, and literally while I am working on offhand shooting (dry fire with a laser cartridge) drills.
@SprSonik133 ай бұрын
this is one of the best videos I’ve watched on shooting fundamentals… all without the tacticool BS. Subscribed!
@anthonywold38133 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Not only was there a great life lesson in there, I most certainly learned a few things I need to put into practice on a daily basis! Keep up the great work!!!
@Reaver_Approach3 ай бұрын
Dude I was really hoping you would make a video on this. I'm fairly new to your channel and started seeing you do some of your longer range shooting. Then I've been seeing all this Olympic shooting and how different it is from the 'tactical space' way of shooting. They have truly mastered the trigger pull as you have said, and I agree that that is the most crucial component of shooting the handgun. It took me far too long to learn that and I focused on the reloads and other nonsense. But the core of shooting is that accuracy. It's been so cool to see with your content and these Olympic shooters. Cheers mate, thanks for the video!
@arthurmoore94883 ай бұрын
Remember too, there are different competitions and they are scored differently. Though as you said, fundamentals first.
@Reaver_Approach3 ай бұрын
@@arthurmoore9488 absolutely!
@wilberttboonzaaier25503 ай бұрын
Brilliant video dude. You definitely bring a different perspective to shooting and the gun community here on youtube. Greetings from South Aftica.
@arthurmoore94883 ай бұрын
First time I've seen this channel, but I can see why. It's all about what you want to do with the firearm. For example, Gun Jesus gives us great stories, and fun at the range/events. He's not an expert marksman, and that's fine. Similarly, the brutality matches Ian goes to are scored completely different from the Olympic competition and so encourage focusing on other things. Though the fundamentals remain the fundamentals...
@gcardinal3 ай бұрын
It so damn refreshing to finally see a real talk and a real video that is actually helpful, entertaining and without all that BS that YT is so full of. Thank! That is so great One question: could you recommend a gun for dry firing? something inexpensive and not a real gun
@GigaDanMan3 ай бұрын
You’re such a great teacher! 😊
@justintracy72263 ай бұрын
Awesome video as usual. One small correction, Sanderson does not have any Olympic medals. He did set a record for qualification but after finals his best finish is 5th. Which is still damn good shooting!
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
Oh that's right! I must have confused him and Bill McMillan since I was going to bring him up later in the vid
@mikemar423 ай бұрын
Here I was waiting for your take on it. Awesome vid man.
@mannyferrao10133 ай бұрын
I agree with you when it comes to trigger pull, sight alignment, breathing and so on. The difference between the two is, with air gun shooting you have a SH? #t load of time to take your shot and in idpa and ipsc you are running around and being timed. Those differences will definitely make your accuracy very difrent.
@mikegonzalez43213 ай бұрын
Great video, I'm weakest in pistol and just picked up a new pistol and looking to improve. Thanks for giving some great info.
@UncleManuel3 ай бұрын
What a breath of fresh air in the heated world of guns on KZbin! Dude, I really didn't expect a (relatively) young guy speaking with so much confidence about gun control (uuuh, bad choice of wording right there 😁) and explaining what really matters. But I guess it's due to the self discipline you gotta have in this sport. Well done! 😎👍
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
bullseye fast tracks you to figuring out what really works. it is *the* most effective and efficient training out there.
@Surai003 ай бұрын
That was a great explanation, and the graphic was perfect. I'm going to suggest this to some pistol permit teachers here in NY. They use clips from Wilson Combat the last I checked.
@MrGibbonboy3 ай бұрын
Thanks for explaining the art and science of competitive shooting. My favorite for many years has been the biathlon athletes - how they get that heartrate down after skiing to nail bullseyes is utterly beyond me.
@maximilianmustermann57633 ай бұрын
A lot of people don't appreciate enough how hard the shooting is in biathlon even without the skiing in between. It's 50 meters, they don't have magnification and the plates are pretty small.
@Chihuahuauno12 күн бұрын
LOVE this "agency" bro... . .
@MarshalZhukov3 ай бұрын
Masterful! Such great info. I wish I was this good at YT when I started so many years ago. Self taught myself and love the equal height equal light saying. My favorite dry fire target is the screw on the light switch cover! And also got some dry fire in on the Sopranos too! The Nighthawk Custom drop in trigger actually really tidied up my little Colt 1991A1! Cylinder and Slide trigger parts on my old SA 1911 Mil Spec are so nice after the head gunsmith at formerly Olympic Arms Richard Neimer (I believe thats his name) did an amazing trigger job on it. Absolutely love my 1911s, and spoil myself with that single action! My Coonan is actually very good on the trigger too!
@edgordon90133 ай бұрын
Very good video with all the steps and good explanations. You nailed it...tnx
@axtondragunov17843 ай бұрын
People forget this is SPORT shooting at paper with the object being Presicion so you can afford to be relaxed and all you need is a pellet gun. COMBAT/gunfighting is when you need the quick mag changes and smooth manipulation and good recoil management. but in combat you aren't trying to hit a .5 inch group at 30 feet you are just trying to drop that threat
@another39973 ай бұрын
That isn't quite true. Mental and physical relaxation aren't automatic when people are in stressful or competitive situations, and that makes the likelihood of mistakes much higher. It takes a great deal of practice and discipline. Such relaxation applies to achieving success in pretty much every discipline, from racing in F1, to Boxing or playing in a Snooker world final. And it applies to the military too... not everyone is running around just shooting anything that moves.
@axtondragunov17843 ай бұрын
@another3997 there is a reason police and us military only hit 20% and about 40% of thier shots when they are stressed because that stress throws off your aim beyond belief hell even when someone is standing still (and this includes me) drawing from the holster and firing with a handgun is extremely hard to get consistent accuracy and this is without moving without running or being shot at. That being said these olympic shooters are masters at thier sport unparalleled save for the other athletes and sportsmen who are also competing at that level. and if all they need to do is punch a little hole in the paper then thier technique is the best for that job. What I was referring to is when OP said that a 2 handed grip is unnecessary for accurate shooting with a firearm which unless op is referring to the olympics and not combat or other more ordinary situations he is wrong on many levels
@hb91452 ай бұрын
@@axtondragunov1784 Yes, I have heard of police officers missing roughly 50% of their shots at more or less point blank.
@LiorIPSC3 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Every word is true. Subscribed!
@hb91452 ай бұрын
Thanks! I really enjoy these technical videos from someone who actually can shoot, much more than people firing at watermelons and soda cans from a few meters away.
@marloc20193 ай бұрын
I started out as compressed-air pistol shooter and then moved to 22lr and then bigger calibers. CAP gives you the very foundations for any pistol shooting activity.
@loghan983 ай бұрын
Thank you. Will use this video to train better
@ty250a3 ай бұрын
Thank you, my scores seem to go up after I watch your Vids.
@Action_Ichi3 ай бұрын
good video man, youre a funny guy too. havent heard "workspace" in like 5 years lmao
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
shoutout to the PGL podcast that had me rofling about that
@javaduke13 ай бұрын
I spent almost entire day yesterday explaining to all my friends and relatives why this meme is stupid, what is the purpose of special shooting glasses, what is the olympic pistol stance and what are the real reasons why Dikec is a great shooter :) I guess one good thing that comes out of it is that people finally showed some interest for shooting sports :) I sincerely hope it will bring at least a few new shooters to the range. (on a related note, I looked at the qualification results and Dikec was the only one who shot a perfect 100 series. Unfortunately, his 571 still was not enough to make it to the finals)
@giuseppinamastropaolo70043 ай бұрын
Great video dude, thanks for telling it like it is.
@Hypergraph3 ай бұрын
thanks for explanation, i didn't know they were targetin a target so small
@rimanahbvee3 ай бұрын
First time seeing a vid of you, really good
@antovega23 ай бұрын
you’re the man! thank you
@hob9763 ай бұрын
Really excellent content. One of my immediate clicks.
@KungFuHonky3 ай бұрын
That dude is like a real life, Lee Van Cleef. Every time he shoots, I hear the song on the pocket watch from Fistful of Dollars in my head.
@jtdundee3 ай бұрын
Best Firearm Video of 2024.
@ericferguson99893 ай бұрын
Follow-through is big in Archery, too. My shooting improved exponentially just from that
@James-ke5sx3 ай бұрын
Very interesting information. I'm just an amateur shooter at home, retired in my seventies. I have quite a few of the older style air guns, Russian, Spanish German, Italian Etc. It's just a hobby for me I could never hit anything that far away.
@danim84143 ай бұрын
Turks are just built different
@sivispacem13 ай бұрын
Historically accurate 💪🏼
@ryanlemons78313 ай бұрын
So excited to see you recommend gunblue! He’s such a gem!
@elo96973 ай бұрын
Thank You!!🙌🏽
@sebastiantarantello38933 ай бұрын
Great video buddy I'm looking forward to putting into practice your suggestions. Seb Australia 🇦🇺
@charlesso10603 күн бұрын
Jj Racaza talks a lot about follow through. He talks about the importance of reacquiring your sights after breaking the shot. He's a top uspsa and ipsc shooter.
@Paul_Sergeyev3 ай бұрын
I thing another video that discusses this topic is "Mastering the Glock trigger" at Guns, Gear & On Target Training, LCC
@jlastre3 ай бұрын
One of the most important exercises that is not discussed from sensei Saitama in _One Punch Man_ is to, “Do 1000 dry fires every single day without fail. Never miss a single day.”
@nosidenoside24583 ай бұрын
12:52 "oh there's a sponsor" "Oh wait cool"
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
raid shadow legends
@kennethmattsson8803 ай бұрын
This is what I love about the Olympics. Get young people excited about sports people don't usually talk about!
@z33d63 ай бұрын
brown guy talking about firearms and headshots for 15 minutes on yt... ii can hear the atf and fbi rolling out at his doorstep on a serious note well done mate, extremly well made and on point, very educating
@walkingwiener35713 ай бұрын
That dude has charisma! I just want to be like him!
@nickolasthefrog3 ай бұрын
Thanks for mentioning minute of angle in a handgun discussion. I tend to get blank stares.
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
yes because usually the accuracy standard people hold themselves to with pistols is measured in degrees 😂 i think an A zone at 7 yds is 85 MOA or 1.25 Degrees, the whole target is exponentially more than that
@PirabeirabaBoy3 ай бұрын
Virgin gun tubers: "Olimpic shooting isn't real shooting, we americans know what real shooting is, and real shooting is done with real guns, 22s and air guns aren't real guns" Based Jared: Well, yeah, those guys at the Olympics are pretty good. Shooting a gun precisely isn't like mag dumping into trash. Thanks for saying something so controversial yet so brave.
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
listening and learning
@ParaBellaActual3 ай бұрын
You’ve proven to be an authority on handgun shooting, so it’s interesting to hear that you consistently state that grip, stance, and recoil are not as important. I may need to rethink my entire life 😅
@JaredAF3 ай бұрын
It is certainly important, but vastly overstated in most contexts, for slow fire/accurate shooting alone especially. Also the most important thing in the equation is grip pressure rather than the particularities/shape of how you're gripping. In general though, as the trigger weight goes up and recoil goes up the tighter you need to grip.
@KaptajnKaffe3 ай бұрын
A lot of people need to learn how to land one accurate shots before they focus on several shots. Why focus on grip and stance when you are still training with 22 - your muscles are probaly not even trained at this point not to mention muscle memory.
@DarkRendition3 ай бұрын
I trust his nonchalant dominance.
@countofsif3 ай бұрын
Agree. Most videos (mostly from the US) only focus on defense tactics, not on accuracy. That's the difference in gun culture. Personally, I am happy I was able to start target practice at age 12 with an air gun, rather than having to wait until I'm an adult to get my hands on a louder version of the same principle 😉
@rgsoda3 ай бұрын
Superb vid! Should be played for each new shooter!! Should`t be: inhale rifle goes up, exhale rifle goes down? ;)