It was in March 2007. IIRC, Peyton had one or two abscess teeth. He participated some in the shooting portion, but was really hurting, so he had someone else lead the indoor shooting instruction. Peyton did lead the outdoor range stuff.
RE: the video with Bill Kipp as the knife wielding attacker. Similar, but not exactly. Been ten years, but my recollection is we used blanks and simulations. No "rubber bullets" or Airsoft. Attacker had mask, chest protector, and coat for protection. Practiced from 20' down to 3' or 4'. Don't recall the attacks being that sloppy, but they did adjust the pace of the attack depending on the skill of the student. A couple principles in the video are the same. Move perpendicular to the line of attack, away from the weapon. Never turn your back towards the attacker. Not in the video, but like I mentioned in my earlier post, if you're moving, move. If you're shooting, shoot. No happy feet. Stable platform when you shoot.
He says he doesn't know who it would have been, if it wasn't him. Irregardless, it would have been someone teaching his methods under his direction. Number 1 is his response to a copy/paste of post #30. Number 2 was regarding overview questions of the basic movement he uses in the drill. The fact he is expecting an assailant to fully commit from a long range charge explains the why.
From Peyton Quinn via email...
" 1. If this is supposed to reflect my stress shooting class then it is not fully accurate. Pausing for a stable platform can be done but it demands perfect timing. Under stress that's hard to achieve.
Further if the stepping off the attack line on a charging enemy is done right, he runs past you as he can't change his vector when running to get you at flat out speed. This is where timing is important, move off too soon and he can track and change his vector.
It is not necessary to have stable shooting as your brain (amygdala) won't let you take your eyes off the threat.
In my classes virtually nobody misses the attacker even as they are moving away.
My friend a lot of misinformation is out there about shooting incidents and what the skill set needed is. Once you have been there for real you see the truth. The more realistic the scenario and that means engaging a real adrenal dump, then it is easier to understand why the sights can't be used.
The foot work can be a shuffle or a step, it depends on the individuals leg length to some extent and their proclivity for moving really. It has to be simple, do not over think it get the essential concept of his being commited to the attack line before you move.
Now at 3 feet that is not available period as he has no real forward inertia. The only defense then is to slap the weapon, (maybe get cut too) as you step aside draw and fire. Most people are right handed so this means slipping the knife arm to the right as they move to the left and fire.
2. I have been doing this drill at RMCAT/STRESSHOOTING for over 30 years really. It somehow became known as the Tueller Drill I discovered years later to show police how quickly a person can close distance with knife attack.
The basic idea is a person 23 feet away can charge with a knife and stab a person repeatedly before that person could draw a concealed weapon and shoot and stop him. Indeed even with a quick draw exposed holster ( like some police carry) we saw that few people could draw and fire before contact with the knife was made.
The solution was to allow the attacker to be fully committed to the attack line and stepping off that line and to the side (diagonally), forward or backward and fire. After having been shown the technique half the people who failed , succeeded in the first attempt at using the technique. The other half took only two or three practice tries to get it correctly and avoid being stabbed.
Any technique that can't be learned in a few minutes really is often too complex to work under the stress of a real situation. That is part of my training philosophy with a very few exceptions.
Training methodology is really everything.. This is why boxers can easily defeat very quickly most Asian style trained MA people. It is not the techniques of boxing, which are only 5 anyway, but its contact stress training method."