Originally posted by Big Foot:
If cross draw was "faster, safer, than one who attempts SS" why isn't there a single agency/department teaching this for their folks who carry concealed? Think FBI, ATF, DEA, ICE...the list goes on. None of them think cross draw is faster, safer or better. They've tested every method going and SS is always the primary method taught.
Simply put: civilians have more parameters. Much of what you listed are carry over from range protocal where you are limited due to over-zealous legal/safety factors.
You still haven't addressed sweeping back a heavy unbuttoned overcoat in SS while walking the Mall in Minnesota? Your frame of reference is strictly "range genre"; not the real world on the streets. Fending off a BG in a gun-grab is no different from either side if you know how to react. You are NOT static, you move, side or back. I still contend that with my CQ training, I'm at no disadvantage.
In some ways civilians have more parameters, but not in others...depends on what you choose to look at. For example, I had to carry on a plane today...not something a civilian would have to plan for. Every time I fly I have to be ready for this....heck, it even alters the seats I (should) choose.....so it's got to make me think about my holster setup.
I have never mentioned the range protocal "safety" issue of sweeping across the range. I realize that the range can't duplicate the real-world and so I never addressed it. Others may have, but I don't recall a single point about that. It's no different than with shoulder holsters. I'll let my folks qualify with them, but I'll put a righty at the left end of the bay and a lefty on the right end of the bay. Yes, they could somehow have an AD behind them or so the side, but I make sure there's nobody in that area and make sure everyone is aware of what's going on. It's a slight risk, but I'd prefer people at least get a little practice with what they carry. Lately we haven't had anybody carry that way so it hasn't been an issue.
Sure I addressed the heavy overcoat SS draw previously. I spent the last several years wearing a suit and a heavy (cashmere) overcoat on top of that in the winter, so I have lots of practice carrying in that mode. The hook technique works just fine there too.
It's actually funny that you're suggesting my frame of reference is range genre. That's about as far from reality as can be. I do shoot pistol matches and fun stuff, but I TRAIN to shoot from concealed as that's the way I walk around 365 days a year. On duty I normally carry a G22 in a Kramer VBS and a G27 in an Alessi ankle rig. I practice drawing and shooting with a cover garmet frequently...and not some light little photographers vest either. I've spent countless hours working on techniques, have other folks pick them apart, and try to improve them. I help our two tactical instructors work on defensive/offensive tactics and incorporate them into the training I give. I try my absolute hardest to get people to qualify the way they carry, and to work on advanced skills that are above and beyond what they got at the academy. None of what I teach is "range genre" or competition oriented. I send out all the after-action writeups I can find and always, always, always, try to get people to think about what really happens on the street as opposed to what they do on qualification days.
Well, you're more than welcome to think that you're not at a disadvantage in a gun-grab situation, but it goes against the laws of physics and body mechanics. Your muscles and joints are only strongest in one direction. Sure, you're going to move etc, but you're already defending your gun with the arm/hand that's not as strong....assuming no physical impairment with your strong side hand/arm (which could factor in for some people, certainly). The grip is pointed in the wrong direction for that hand to grasp and cover, but it's pointed neatly at the BG. The most commonly accepted "best" method of retention during a gun grab seems to be where you hook your thumb across the backstrap (or hammer of a revolver) and the rest of your fingers wrap around the slide (topstrap of a revolver). You can't do that cross draw because the gun is simply pointed the wrong way and there isn't a terribly effective alternative...they're pulling the thick part and you're holding the thin part...it's easier to pull through your hand that way. SS, they have to pull the thick part through your hand...not as easy.
Still, there is simply NO way to fire from a position of retention using cross draw...you have to nearly hand the gun to a bad guy if he's really close...think of how that compares with the traditional "speed rock" where the gun is just above the SS holster, pinned into your body with the gun canted outwards so the slide doesn't grab on your or your clothes. It's a VERY common scenario to shoot from that position...can't get there from here cross draw.
In fact, about two months ago we had a State Police officer get into a scuffle with two guys who bum rushed him and pinned him to his car. He managed to get the gun out and fire from a position of retention just as I described....one BG DRT and the other spent a week in the hospital. If he'd had an old-fashioned cross draw rig with a Sam Browne belt, he'd be dead now. Granted, that just one shooting, but it's pretty common. From the video, he likely couldn't have gotten his hand on a cross draw gun, and if he could have, he wouldn't have been able to draw it because the two guys were up against him. He certainly wouldn't have been able to get it out, fire and not risk them taking it away as he pushed it out in front of him. He grabbed the gun, pulled up a couple of inches, pivoted his arm and let lead fly....classic, classic shoot scenario that happens all the time.
I know a fellow agent who wound up wrestling with a BG in a similar fashion...SS carry, got the gun out and shot with the gun inches from the holster...BG DRT as well.
As I've said repeatedly, there are scenarios where cross draw is an excellent choice. It's just not the best or even next to best for the average person who's going to carry CCW unless some extremely odd conditions are in play like a really unusual body shape, physical impairment etc. Short of those, some sort of SS carry is almost always the best....just a general statement....because of the many disadvantages to cross draw.
Every method has disadvantages....some just have a lot more than others and I only see one person trying to defend/rationalize that those inherint disadvantages for cross draw either aren't there, or don't matter for them....that says a lot. I certainly don't see anybody picking on a bunch of problems with SS carry....well, that's probably because it doesn't have many
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