You're not looking to achieve what I'd call precision. You're learning precision so that you can apply that to shooting faster and more or less accurately. The target and distance requirements of a discipline like bullseye magnify errors that you'd miss shooting for an A-zone--the most common one being failing to have an uninterrupted, linear increase in trigger pressure. There's nothing written that says you can't do exactly that four or five times in a second.
I know of one gunfight involving a Master-class bullseye shooter. Dude managed what I recall was a KFC, which was robbed by some guy with a S&W .38. Anyways, the robber decides to shoot Bullseye Dude from a range of 3-5 yards. Robber Guy gets off three shots, manages to hit our hero in the shooting arm with the first one, pegs a bag of flour with the second.
Bullseye Dude, armed with some no-name *** .380 or .32 or some damn thing, and wounded in the arm while getting his gun up, gets six shots off. Shots #1-#4 hit Robber Guy square in the chest, but fail to reach his heart because of a bundle of rolled quarters he's clutching while firing. But they blow apart the change, and shot #5 goes to the same exact place, this time penetrating. Shot #6 hits the door as Robber Guy slams it trying to run out of the store. He makes it about a hundred yards before he realizes he's dead.
Admittedly new to all this but I'm not sure we should base our training on our opponents incompetence
Wouldn't it be better to think of our opponent as being at as least competent as we are
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